Brother & Sister
A Memoir
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
When they were kids in the suburbs of Los Angeles in the 1950s, Diane Keaton and her younger brother, Randy, were best friends and companions. But as they grew up, Randy became troubled, then reclusive. Before he was thirty, he was divorced, an alcoholic, a man who couldn’t hold on to full-time work—his life a world away from his sister’s, and from the rest of their family. Now Diane delves into the nuances of their shared, and separate, pasts to confront the difficult question of why and how Randy ended up living his life on “the other side of normal.” In beautiful and fearless prose intertwined with journal entries, letters, and poetry—much of it Randy’s own—and supplemented by personal photographs and artwork, this insightful, heartfelt memoir contemplates the inner workings of a family, the ties of love and responsibility that hold it together, and the special bond between siblings—even those who are pulled far apart.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Actor Keaton (Let's Just Say It Wasn't Pretty) focuses on her complex relationship with her mentally ill younger brother in this resonant and melancholy family memoir. Keaton admits that she saw her brother, Randy, as a burden when they were kids growing up in Southern California: "He was a nuisance, a scaredy-cat, and a crybaby." As she got older, "he became an absent presence. I avoided him as my life got busier while his got smaller and more difficult." Throughout, Keaton shares details of her career (filmmakers Woody Allen and Nancy Meyers, among others, get mentions), but the focus is on Randy, an alcoholic plagued by sadomasochistic fantasies about women, and whose escalating instability vividly described here (in a letter to Keaton, Randy writes, "When I thought about sex it was always with a knife") affected Keaton, her parents, and her two sisters. The author, who became "the family documentarian" after her mother's death in 2008, utilizes family letters and journals to enhance the narrative, which follows Randy as he unravels and turns into a "Boo Radley character." Keaton talks about the complexities of loving a brother she never quite knew; of watching him become consumed by alcohol, then falling into the grip of dementia "in the process of dying"; and of wishing she had done more to help him ("I want to have another chance at being a better sister"). This slim but weighty book stands as a haunting meditation on mortality, sibling love, mental illness, and regret.
Customer Reviews
Brother and Sister
Reading this book was enlightening in that most people are screwed up. Myself included. There is no such thing as “normal”.