Thirty Rooms to Hide In: Insanity, Addiction, and Rock 'n' Roll in the Shadow of the Mayo Clinic

(No reviews yet) Write a Review
$25.80 - $34.46
UPC:
9780816679553
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
8/31/2012
Author:
Luke Longstreet Sullivan
Language:
english
Edition:
1st

Warning:Codes/CDs/Accessories are not guaranteed for used books!

Product Overview

Author Luke Longstreet Sullivan has a simple way of describing his new memoir: Its like The Shining . . . only funnier. And as this astonishing account reveals, the comment is accurate. Thirty Rooms to Hide In tells the story of Sullivans father and his descent from being one of the worlds top orthopedic surgeons at the Mayo Clinic to a man who is increasingly abusive, alcoholic, and insane, ultimately dying alone on the floor of a Georgia motel. For his wife and six sons, the years prior to his death were years of turmoil, anger, and family dysfunction; but somehow, they were also a time of real happiness for Sullivan and his five brothers, full of dark humor and much laughter.

Through the 1950s and 1960s, the six brothers had a wildly fun and thoroughly dysfunctional childhood living in a forbidding thirty-room mansion, known as the Millstone, on the outskirts of Rochester, Minnesota. The many rooms of the immense home, as well as their mothers loving protection, allowed the Sullivan brothers to grow up as normal, mischievous boys. Against a backdrop of the timesthe Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, fallout shelters, JFKs assassination, and the Beatlesthe cracks in their home life and their fathers psyche continue to widen. When their mother decides to leave the Millstone and move the family across town, the Sullivan boys are able to find solace in each other and in rock n roll.

As Thirty Rooms to Hide In follows the story of the Sullivan familyat times grim, at others poignantthere is a wonderful, dark humor that lifts the narrative. Tragic, funny, and powerfully evocative of the 1950s and 1960s, Thirty Rooms to Hide In is a tale of public success and private dysfunction, personal and familial resilience, and the strange power of humor to give refuge when it is needed most, even if it cant always provide the answers.

Reviews

(No reviews yet) Write a Review