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Martha Nichols's avatar

Susan, you brave writing soul - you always get straight to the bullshit behind media platitudes. This piece is so sharp, well-argued, and personally vulnerable - all the qualities you’ve convinced me are missing from Molly Jong-Fast’s memoir. I read an excerpt a few days ago, and it disturbed me, too, for many of the same reasons. I also thought it was very poorly written (that faux self-awareness and “should I say that?” you mention). The mostly positive reviews stagger me.

I thought she was writing about her mother in ways I never would, and I had a problematic artist mother myself. In fact, I’ve been doing some memoir writing about my mother, but my focus has been on her art and the dissonance within myself. Big ego, mental illness, nastiness - you can’t separate an artist from their work.

One of my biggest rules as a personal nonfiction writer and teacher of this form is that you should never expose other people more than you expose yourself. Molly JF may think she’s done that my talking about her own recovery, but based on what I’ve read, she hasn’t looked hard enough at herself to figure out why she wrote this. It saddens me enormously that nobody pushed her to go deeper and to exhibit kindness as well as daughterly hurt.

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Eileen Brokaw's avatar

Thank you. My mother and I are (were- she’s been gone awhile) both second wave feminists. I had unusual, brilliant, often oblivious, sometimes neglectful parents myself, and I wrestle with their legacy. I cannot imagine writing a memoir of this ilk. I read a couple of reviews, and cannot understand how this elucidates anything important for the public understanding of either mother or daughter. Write it out in long hand, get it all on the page, share it with your therapist. But don’t inflict this on the world.

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