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  • My Memoir's Published! The Emotional Roller Coaster of Month One
My Memoir's Published! The Emotional Roller Coaster of Month One
Contributor
Written by
Cindi Michael
September 2016
Contributor
Written by
Cindi Michael
September 2016

“An emotional roller coaster!” That’s how one reader described my memoir, The Sportscaster’s Daughter. The same could be said of the book’s first month of publication.

The official publication date was August 23, but it seems that only the likes of JK Rowling can keep those boxes sealed until the release date (friends advised me Amazon preorders had shipped the week before). So my local book club had an early, impromptu gathering. I advised them: they were only invited if they agreed to be brutally honest about the book and its secrets that most of them hadn’t known. They are a highly educated, opinionated bunch. Just don’t get us going on The Red Tent and do be sure the wine keeps flowing!

It’s no doubt a tricky thing to discuss a memoir. How can you critique a character in the same way, when it not a fictional character, but rather, a real living, person sitting in front of you? I had to assure them that writer’s workshops are a tougher audience and showed them samples of marked up manuscripts that had more red pen than black typeface.  The conversation started with the usual comments. “My book club hadn’t known how heart breaking my childhood had been and some of those scenes were tough to take.”  Some revealed that their husband’s borrowed their book, because they wanted to know about the famed sportscaster, George Michael.   They criticized him for his failings, but credited him for the things he did right. And then the conversation that every writer hopes for:  how my story made them reflect on their own family relationships. What are the limits of their own inner strength?

During book club, one friend asked me, “Does it hurt you when we criticize your dad?” This is a tricky question. And over the past month, I’ve learned that so much depends on who is criticizing and how. I am still protective of my dad; it’s so important to me that people recognize him for when he was a good father (The Golden Years chapter) and understand the challenges he had from his own abusive childhood.  A Deadspin article on the memoir and only on my father’s worst mistakes most certainly hurt. I guess that is that site’s style. People don’t like to have their idols tainted in any way, and I suspected the book would draw anger from those fans. Beyond that, I do love hearing from people who remember my dad as a disc jockey. Those were happy times. And I’m not thrilled to hear that people preferred Glen Brenner over my dad. He will always be my favorite sportscaster.

There were a few posts on Goodreads that gave me pause. Ironically, even though I am an avid reader, this is not a site I had used before. One reader said they would have liked to hear more of my father’s side of the story. I would have too! But in memoir, we can’t make things up. All I could give you was the chapter The Letter, because that is the most he gave me. From my sister, the only explanation is that I hurt him. How remains unclear. By moving away? By getting married without him being there? That was his choice as described in the chapter Fairy Tales. I’ve included speculation by others – his uncle and a therapist, but their views are their own interpretations, trying to explain that which my father probably didn’t understand himself. I mean, really: he wasn’t reflective to begin with and his work schedule didn’t allow much time for soul searching. As I’ve said, his coping technique and mine works for a period —being a workaholic can dull an unnamed pain.  I find it no small coincidence that my father died less than two years after he retired of an illness he should have been able to beat. Did too much free time allow for too much time to think (Repeating the Cycle chapter)?

Another Goodreads reader surmised that I must have left something out— that I must have done something worse to lead to being disowned. Nope. I would have preferred to leave out the chapters My Fall from Grace and Dying. Reliving those scenes almost killed me, again, but to leave those out would have been misleading to a reader and unfair to my father in explaining that first rift.  Victims often blame themselves, as I did for a time. It’s taken me years to come to realize the fault was not mine.  And as a mother, I really can’t think of what my own children could ever do that would justify a disowning, period. As one person pointed out to me: Did the Jews deserve what happened in the Holocaust? How could Hitler have convinced an entire country to persecute the innocent? And yet, it happened.  A more light hearted comparison is The Emperor’s New Clothes.

Beyond the readers’ reviews, it’s been so nice to reconnect with some long forgotten friends, to hear from people who say my book helped them reflect on their own family dynamics, and, of course, to be compared to one of my favorites The Glass Castle.   I am honored the book made a few important fall round ups:

  • BuzzFeed: 10 Memoirs That Shed A Light On Unseen Family Life “...candid and deeply touching as it reveals one family’s struggle with forgiveness and faith.”
  • Culturalist:  10 Memoirs Exploring Family Relationships
  • BookSparks: Ten Memoirs for Fall By Trailblazing Women “…sets the bar for familial understanding, forgiveness and hope.”

 

I've never thought of myself as a trailblazer, only a survivor. Thank you for reading!

 

 

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Comments
  • Cindi Michael

    Hi, Mary, road to publication was several years. I have published some books traditionally but for this I went with hybrid, She WRites Press. Have you read Brooke's book "Greenlight Your Book"? I highly recommend it. Have you already written? That's the other difference in publication - the whole manuscript needs to be done and ready to go, whereas fiction and other non fiction you can query first. I have another blog here on My Split Personality - The Memoirist and Technical Writer that describes some of the differences, but I'm not adept at adding URLs in comments :).

  • Mary Hillwagner

    I agree memoirs are tough. Could you tell me more about your road to publication?

    I have a memoir of my own. I'm having difficulty getting traction beyond the query stage.

  • Suzy Soro

    I loved this. My memoir also contains a ton of secrets no one has ever known, about my parents mainly, and some about me. My father is no longer with us and my mother has some early dementia symptoms, although the doctors say she doesn't. In any event, it's difficult to reveal secrets about one's family without it taking an emotional toll. I've dragged my feet writing it since some of it is so painful. Because of my own parents, I never wanted children.

  • Nancy Chadwick Publishing

    So good to hear a memoir writer's thoughts, post  publication. Lots to learn from. Thanks for for sharing.