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After Visiting Friends
After Visiting Friends: A Son's Story | Michael Hainey
3 posts | 9 read | 10 to read
This haunting story of a son’s quest to understand the mystery of his father’s death is “searing and unforgettable…memoir writing at its best” (San Francisco Chronicle)—a “powerfully affecting” (O, The Oprah Magazine) portrait of a family and its legacy of secrets.“Family? Secrets? Sometimes I think they are the same thing.” So writes Michael Hainey in this unforgettable story of a son’s search to discover the decades-old truth about his father’s mysterious death. Hainey was a boy of six when his father, a bright and shining star in the glamorous, hard-living world of 1960s Chicago newspapers, died under mysterious circumstances. His tragic absence left behind not only a young widow and two small sons but questions about family and truth that would obsess Michael for decades. Years later, Michael undertakes a risky journey to uncover the true story about what happened to his father. Prodding reluctant relatives and working through a network of his father’s old colleagues, Michael begins to reconcile the father he lost with the one he comes to know. At the heart of his quest is his mother, a woman of courage and tenacity—and a steely determination to press on with her life. A universal story of love and loss and the resilience of family in the face of hardship, After Visiting Friends is the account of a son who goes searching for his father, and in the journey discovers new love and admiration for his mother.
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review
LibraryCin
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Mehso-so

It was ok. It was a somewhat interesting search for the author to find out what had happened, but I didn‘t like the writing style. He wrote in very short choppy non-sentences (well, some were sentences!). It also jumped around in time quite a bit, maybe more in the first half (that, or I got used to it and didn‘t notice as much in the second half). The short sentences and short chapters made it quick to read

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Crysboehne
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Upon listening to the Lobster Shift episode (that‘s based on this book) of the podcast Family Secrets, I am quite interested in giving this a read. The sadness in the authors voice and his story telling unearth a feeling of sadness that intrigues me.

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AlizaApp
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Mehso-so

I enjoyed the anecdotes about the Chicago newspaper scene in the 60s. But the author spends a lot of time pondering the meaning of fathers and sons for someone who admittedly has been raised by a strong mother and grandmother.