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Don't Call Me Home
Don't Call Me Home: A Memoir | Alexandra Auder
3 posts | 3 read | 1 reading | 2 to read
“Don’t Call Me Home is about madness and love. Alexandra tells the best stories about her extraordinary childhood as she travels the world with her mother Viva. Wit and wisdom wrapped and bound with love.” --Debbie Harry “Alexandra Auder’s Don’t Call Me Home is thrumming with life, in all its absurdity, vividness, and gunk. I literally laughed and cried, and cheered hard throughout for our intrepid narrator, who has gifted us an incomparable tale.”--Maggie Nelson author of The Argonauts and On Freedom A moving and wickedly funny memoir about one woman’s life as the daughter of a Warhol superstar and the intimate bonds of mother-daughter relationships Alexandra Auder’s life began at the Chelsea Hotel—New York City’s infamous bohemian hangout—when her mother, Viva, a longtime resident of the hotel and one of Andy Warhol’s superstars, went into labor in the lobby. These first moments of Alexandra’s life, documented by her filmmaker father, Michel Auder, portended the whirlwind childhood and teen years that she would go on to have. At the center of it all is Viva: a glamorous, larger-than-life woman with mercurial moods, who brings Alexandra with her on the road from gig to gig, splitting time between a home in Connecticut and Alexandra’s father’s loft in 1980s Tribeca, then moving back again to the Chelsea Hotel and spending summers with Viva’s upper-middle-class, conservative, hyperpatriarchal family of origin. In Don’t Call Me Home, Alexandra meditates on the seedy glory of being raised by two counterculture icons, from walking a pet goat around Chelsea and joining the Squat Theatre company to coparenting her younger sister, Gaby, with her mother and partying in East Village nightclubs. Flitting between this world and her present-day life as a yoga instructor, actress, mother, wife, and much-loved Instagram provocateur, Alexandra weaves a stunning, moving, and hilarious portrait of a family and what it means to move away from being your mother’s daughter into being a person of your own.
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jdiehr
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I love memoirs and have a fascination with the Chelsea Hotel, so this was a perfect audiobook for me!

Alex's mother, Viva (a Warhol superstar), went into labor in the lobby of the Chelsea. Her filmmaker father caught much of her early life on film.

Her bohemian upbringing is fun to hear about most of the time and cringe worthy at other times.

I loved when her little sister, Gaby, came on the scene.

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Cosmos_Moon
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Entertaining audio memoir of a girl growing up as the daughter of one of Andy Warhol‘s actresses, Viva Superstar, in the Chelsea Hotel. I enjoyed the shenanigans of Viva, some questionable parenting, and the lives of Alexandra and her baby sister Gaby Hoffman.

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