I've had to think up a way to survive On trauma, persistence, and Dolly Parton

Lynn Melnick

Book - 2022

"When everything fell apart for Lynn Melnick, she spent the money from her NYPL fellowship on a trip to Dollywood with her family. Melnick's trauma began long before 2018, but events of that year forced her to relive portions of it--abortions, drug abuse, rape--even as she was confronting new pain in the loss of close friends and family. Dolly Parton's music had been a balm and a source of inspiration for decades, and so the trip to Dollywood was "a personal reckoning with my traumatic, often violent past...the culmination of a difficult year that left me wanting to get to the bottom of just what it is I love and need to say about Dolly." Each chapter of this book explores some aspect of Melnick's life through ...the lens of one of Parton's songs. Melnick is a mother, wife, daughter, survivor, poet; this manuscript has her examining sex, sex work, religion, jealousy, class, nostalgia, aging, illness, motherhood, addiction, abortion, and art, among other topics that can be illuminated in a discussion and appreciation of Dolly's music and life"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Austin : University of Texas Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Lynn Melnick (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
266 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781477322673
  • Introduction Seven Bridges Road
  • Chapter 1. Why'd You Come in Here Lookin' Like That
  • Chapter 2. Steady as the Rain
  • Chapter 3. The Seeker
  • Chapter 4. Here You Come Again
  • Chapter 5. Jolene
  • Chapter 6. The Grass Is Blue
  • Chapter 7. Coat of Many Colors
  • Chapter 8. Islands in the Stream
  • Chapter 9. Do I Ever Cross Your Mind
  • Chapter 10. Will He Be Waiting for Me
  • Chapter 11. Down from Dover
  • Chapter 12. Silver Dagger
  • Chapter 13. Don't Think Twice
  • Chapter 14. I Don't Believe You've Met My Baby
  • Chapter 15. Little Sparrow
  • Chapter 16. 9 to 5
  • Chapter 17. Two Doors Down
  • Chapter 18. Put a Little Love in Your Heart
  • Chapter 19. Blue Smoke
  • Chapter 20. The Bargain Store
  • Chapter 21. The Story
  • Acknowledgments
  • I Will Always Love You
  • References and Resources
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet Melnick (Refusenik) delivers a riveting blend of cultural criticism and memoir in this paean to Dolly Parton, "an icon of feminine strength." Melnick first heard Parton at age 14 in 1988 while she was checking into a drug rehabilitation program. Recounting Parton's "Islands in the Stream," Melnick writes, "the multifaceted clarity of her voice hooked me instantly." Two decades later, Melnick found herself in search of Parton again, while vacationing at Parton's theme park, Dollywood, and working through the "retraumatiz" brought by a book she'd recently published about her trauma (including surviving rape as a child). Though belittled on account of her looks, the multitalented musician and savvy businesswoman's songs, Melnick argues, reckoned with hard-hitting themes--from a response to patriarchy and rape culture in "Jolene" to a meditation on the pain of poverty in "Coat of Many Colors." In contemplative prose, Melnick movingly recalls how Parton's words shepherded her through life: "The Grass Is Blue," for instance, conjures Melnick's struggles to protect her preadolescent daughter, while "Little Sparrow" gave her the strength to deal with the return of an abusive ex. In her quest to "be more Dollylike, rising again and again from the embers of expectation," Melnick offers a gorgeous story of survival and self-discovery. Die-hard Dolly fans won't want to miss this. (Oct.)

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