Review: Priestdaddy by Patricia Lockwood
As is characteristic of Patricia Lockwood's writing style, Priestdaddy is written in short paragraphs and snippets that often feel disjointed, and a little haphazard. The comedy is quite black as she details how the family would move around the USA, often placed in churches that had been rocked by scandal, or in communities that were nuclear wastelands. Mostly, however, it details just how eccentric the family is. Many of the events detailed nearly defy belief, such as the author detailing how she planned to leave the family home with a man she met from the internet and how her father, dressed only in his underwear spoke to the author's newfound partner (who proposed to her that day) as he polished his guns. Then there is the heartbreaking way on how she missed out on a university education, the strange way her parents handled the news when they learned their daughter had been raped and ... suffice to say this book is not detailing the exploits of a typical family. After a while, the episodic dark comedy became a little frustrating and I found myself wishing it would detail a little more of her father's job and the direct impact it had on the author and her family.
Overall, the memoir is entertaining enough, but not really the book that I was looking for.
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