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What Becomes of the Brokenhearted

A Memoir

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For almost a decade, beloved storyteller E. Lynn Harris has welcomed you into his family with his passionate, warm and trail-blazing novels. Now, he invites you into the most intimate world ever—his own.
Since his first book Invisible Life was published in the early 1990s, New York Times bestselling author E. Lynn Harris has wowed, charmed and romanced millions of readers. As a master storyteller, E. Lynn Harris has created an intimate and glamorous world centered around his signature themes of love, friendship and family. People all over the world have fallen in love with his characters and laughed and cried with them.
Now, in his most daring act yet, E. Lynn Harris writes the memoir of his life–from his childhood in Arkansas as a closeted gay boy through his struggling days as a self-published author to his rise as a New York Times bestselling author. In What Becomes of the Brokenhearted, E. Lynn Harris shares an extraordinary life touched by loneliness and depression, but more important, he reveals the triumphant life of a small-town dreamer who was able through writing to make his dreams–and more–come true.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      In this less than candid memoir, the author chronicles how a black homosexual from Little Rock--himself--grew up to be a successful and well-adjusted writer. He aims, says he, to give hope to youth suffering from prejudice and low self-esteem. Judging by the writing, he seems more interested in telling his story than in making it interesting or relevant to his audience. Richard Allen reads with gentle sympathy. His velvet baritone is easy on the ears though one wishes he had more finesse and grace. Y.R. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 16, 2003
      With his bestselling novels (And This Too Shall Pass; Abide with Me; etc.) Harris has carved out a niche as a writer of jaunty books with melodramatic plots, usually centering on gay or bisexual black men with riches and rippling biceps. In stark contrast, Harris's memoir is free of the fancy trappings his characters enjoy, starting with the author's suicide attempt in 1990, before he decided to become a writer. From this beginning, Harris goes back to his birth in 1955 and proceeds chronologically, detailing abuse by his stepfather, the awakenings of sexual desire for other men and the discovery of his biological father. Some passages ache for more detail, as when Harris offhandedly mentions working in a brothel at age 13. More often, though, the pace is fitting, giving the book a sense of forward motion as strong as the thoughts of young Harris, dreaming of escape from his native Arkansas. Although he suffers traumas and frustrations as a child, Harris's love life is most heartbreaking. His struggle to find love as an African-American Southern man led to a series of disappointing relationships that taxed Harris's tenderhearted, affectionate nature. He tells this part of his story with such simplicity and straightforwardness, it seems distilled, stripped down to its barest elements until only the clearest emotions remain. Readers of Harris's novels should be surprised at how far from charmed his life was, compared to the troubled but ultimately blissful lives of his fictional characters. Yet they should appreciate the deep honesty with which he describes each stumble and fall. (On sale July 8)Forecast:All of Harris's books have enjoyed runs on national bestseller lists, and this memoir will undoubtedly do the same. Doubleday has issued a CD with a sample chapter read by the author, and a tour and ubiquitous media coverage should yield hearty sales.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      This memoir invites us into the intimate world of bestselling author E. Lynn Harris. Taking us from attempted suicide to recovery from clinical depression, Harris's own warm, halting voice engagingly guides us along the path of his extraordinary life. Harris's objective tone prevents his story from becoming maudlin or trite. This gay black man's story is a triumph for any American, but it is especially so for those whose lives have been made difficult by others due to their race, sexual preference, or disability. P.R. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 1, 2003
      Widely known for his sexy, urban African-American novels (A Love of My Own, etc.), Harris now reveals the inspiring story of his own life. Harris's smooth, Southern accent and conversational tone immediately put listeners at ease, and the heartfelt, unpretentious candor of his narration more than makes up for any details lost in the abridged audio translation. Convinced he would die "one of the brokenhearted," Harris recalls his struggles with his abusive father, his 1990 suicide attempt, his battle with depression and his first gay relationship. Though much of the memoir focuses on the difficulties he faces growing up poor in a small town and of a race that largely considered his homosexuality "inappropriate," the author's underlying message—that you can triumph through perseverance—is universal. Harris leavens his narrative with humorous anecdotes, including a particularly funny reminiscence of his first days at IBM, where he wore shiny suits from Sears, gold chains and sported the "world's largest Afro." Hearing Harris explain how he moved beyond his self-hatred and self-doubt to become the happy, successful author he is today should motivate listeners to make their own "happy endings." Simultaneous release with the Doubleday hardcover (Forecasts, June 16).

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