Ebook Download , by Erin Lee Carr
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, by Erin Lee Carr
Ebook Download , by Erin Lee Carr
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Product details
File Size: 9240 KB
Print Length: 244 pages
Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0399179712
Publisher: Ballantine Books (April 9, 2019)
Publication Date: April 9, 2019
Sold by: Random House LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B07H72W9CS
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#16,185 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
This is a challenging book to comment on, because I totally didn't like Erin Carr (but "liking" is not a requirement for a memoir, and actually can be a detriment), didn't especially like the affected way of including direct emails because it felt dated already, and was generally put off by a lot of Carr's traits - but I was totally connected to it the whole way through and it never flagged and never struck me as anything less than honest.This book - and basically Erin Lee Carr's career - is 100 percent nepotism-driven. This book's blurbs from her father's professional acquaintances are more evidence that if you're born into connection, you're going to get a break that 99.9 percent of the world will never see. It's not that she didn't succeed on her own merits *after* she gets that break, but the vast majority of people never get that opportunity. But - that's not her fault, and she is self-aware enough to know that it's a lucky path she was able to put herself on. In its own way, the book is a window into a life of *expected success."She's a drunk and a cokehead, and any sympathy I might feel for her is often overwhelmed by how unable she is to break away from an obvious cycle of addiction. But that's the problem and the point - she's got all these great chances, and she *can't* break out - because that's what addiction does. You can be the King of England, but if you're a coke fiend, that's still going to be what you are. It's to her credit that despite all that, she keeps plugging away, when most people would just take the easy path - she's lucky to have both the positive and negative sides of an addictive personality (by accounts, she is currently sober).Her father was 100 percent supportive in a way that I don't think most parents actually are. I think a lot of readers might be jealous of that - the emails from her father struck me as mawkish and overwrought, but maybe because I've never gotten those types of emails?What am I reading this for, though? Why would you read it? What's the goal? Most of the "action" is before David Carr's death, so it's not a book about dealing with grief - that's only the last couple chapters (obviously the whole book is informed by the experience, but it's not confronted until the end). She recovers from her addictions enough to professionally move forward after a variety of disasters - but she's young and there was always time to recover, so it's hard to feel like that much was at stake. She's handed opportunities that she squanders and bounces back from - that's certainly a story most of us hope we can live through if it happens to us, but was the world crying out for another spoiled hipster brat's tale of drunken woe?I don't have an easy answer, frankly. Her story is still captivating, and if you're a fan of David Carr, and appreciate what he brought to journalism, this family picture will let you know that he was a good person who had integrity behind the byline, and did the right thing for his family. But it's Erin Lee Carr's very personal story and maybe I'm not sure what the takeaway is to a larger audience.I powered through it - hatereading at many points, and feeling empathetic with her reflection of her failures at others. If I were ever at a party and introduced myself to Erin Carr, I know that she would be totally friendly while looking over my shoulder to see who else to talk too - but at least she'd be friendly. She'll 100 percent win a Best Documentary Academy Award at some point, and thank her father on the stage.I guess this is the origin story for when that happens - this is the thought process, and life experiences that a top-flight creator has to go through to reach that pinnacle. Just like David Carr had to be a junkie who left his daughters in his car so he could score a fix - that informed everything he did that followed, just as these experiences will inform Erin Lee Carr's.So if you read it that way, I think it works and maybe that's my answer for "why." If you want to tell somebody's story, like a documentary filmmaker wants to do, maybe you need to have a story of your own, and lay it out so you're not a hypocrite when you expect your subjects to reveal themselves and all their broken parts. So this is her story, and now we'll see what she can do beyond her father being able to personally email Judd Apatow to get her an internship.
On the evening of Feb 12, 2015 I watched David Carr, The New York Times cultural reporter, writter of The New York Times Carpetbagger blog, and Finalist for The Pulitzer Prize in Commentary, moderate a panel discussion about Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwood and their documentary “Citizenfour,†the Oscar-nominated documentary about Edward J. Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor. It was a fascinating discussion. I noted that David Carr seemed fragile and very short of breath. I am a retired nurse who assisted people with Pulmonary Disease in managing their care. The shortness of breath troubled me. I mentioned to my family that I hoped he had seen someone about this. A few hours later the NYT announced that David had suddenly and unexpectedly died.The author, Erin Lee Carr, has written a memoir of her life and that of her father. David Carr was an enormous presence in Erin and her twin sister, Megan’s lives. Erin shares her life living with an addicted mother, she does not remember, and a father who beat his addiction to drugs and alcohol, to care for his two young daughters. It is worth noting that David Carr wrote a brilliant book about his life and his addictions, “The Night of the Gunâ€. This book gives insight into Erin’s addictions and her life’s work as a documentary filmmaker.Erin brings us from this traumatic time in her life through the earlier years of her childhood to the start of her career. Her father had remarried, and he and Jill had a daughter of their own. Their marriage was successful and happy. Erin followed in her father’s footsteps, professionally and with the same addictive behaviors, alcohol and some drugs. This book is about Erin’s recoveries, and her relationship with her father. She counted on him for a great deal of advice in her career and social life. The years before and after his death are measured in his advice and wisdom primarily in email format. Erin is a forceful writer bringing her inner life to the fore, and we walk with her through her hopes and dreams.The writing is full of the lessons she learned from her father, and the book is a peaen to her father. A wonderful relationship that left her bare and bereft. She leaves us with 27 Things she learned from her father. This is a coming of age story, and Erin’s quest to look for something that would move her forward, something her father said or did. And, she succeeds with this book.Recommended. prisrob 03-31-19
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