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Runaway
Runaway: Notes on the Myths That Made Me | Erin Keane
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From Erin Keane, editor in chief at Salon, comes a touching memoir about the search for truths in the stories families tell. In 1970, Erin Keane's mother ran away from home for the first time. She was thirteen years old. Over the next several years, and under two assumed identities, she hitchhiked her way across America, experiencing freedom, hardship, and tragedy. At fifteen, she met a man in New York City and married him. He was thirty-six. Though a deft balance of journalistic digging, cultural criticism, and poetic reimagining, Keane pieces together the true story of her mother's teenage years, questioning almost everything she's been told about her parents and their relationship. Along the way, she also considers how pop culture has kept similar narratives alive in her. At stake are some of the most profound questions we can ask ourselves: What's true? What gets remembered? Who gets to tell the stories that make us who we are? Whether it's talking about painful family history, #MeToo, Star Wars, true crime forensics, or The Gilmore Girls, Runaway is an unforgettable look at all the different ways the stories we tell--both personal and pop cultural--create us.
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Christine
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Really enjoyed this memoir! Great writing and excellent pop culture analysis, including a response to the “What do we do about art made by problematic people?“ question that spoke to me more than Monsters by Claire Dederer did. (A note re: the audio version on Hoopla - I wonder if the wrong file was uploaded, as it had a decent number of errors/stops and restarts, etc. that I can't imagine were meant for the final product. 😳)