When I Grow up: A Memoir |  | Author: Juliana Hatfield Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $3.55 as of 9/10/2010 15:46 CDT details You Save: $21.40 (86%)
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Seller: Bookbrothers1 Rating: 47 reviews Sales Rank: 324160
Media: Hardcover Pages: 336 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0470189592 Dewey Decimal Number: 782.42164092 EAN: 9780470189597 ASIN: 0470189592
Publication Date: September 22, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description By the early nineties, singer-songwriter and former Blake Babies member Juliana Hatfield’s solo career was taking off: She was on the cover of Spin and Sassy. Ben Stiller directed the video for her song "Spin the Bottle" from the Reality Bites film soundtrack. Then, after canceling a European tour to treat severe depression and failing to produce another "hit," she spent a decade releasing well reviewed albums on indie labels and performing in ever-smaller clubs. A few years ago, she found herself reading the New Yorker on a filthy couch in the tiny dressing room of a punk club and asked, "Why am I still doing this?" By turns wryly funny and woundingly sincere, When I Grow Up takes you behind the scenes of rock life as Hatfield recounts her best and worst days, the origins of her songs, the source of her woes, and her quest to find a new purpose in life.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 47
Juliana Hatfield is Truly Inspiring! Every Struggling Artist Needs To Read This! September 13, 2008 Mr. (USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Most of us have thought about what it would be like to be a famous singer: The attention. The glamour. The money. The power. Singer/Songwriter, Juliana Hatfield got a small taste of that life for herself. In her recent memoir, When I Grow Up, Miss Hatfield recounts the year in which she first toured the United States with her then newly formed band, Some Girls. You'll see what it was really like to be on that tour: The long car rides. The cheaply rundown clubs and dives. The poor working conditions. The bug infested motel rooms. The altercations with fans and co-workers. The difficulties performing. The struggles to stay at peace. Throughout the books take on the tour are other chapters of past reflections by Juliana, regarding her small beginnings in Boston, Massachusetts, meeting up with future Blake Babies band mates, Joe & Freda, as well as being signed briefly by Atlantic Records, only to be let go a few years later, after making three studio albums with them and never seeing the last one released. You'll discover Juliana's struggles with depression and anorexia, and read about her difficulties growing up at home and how they affected her future personal relationships. See where she is today, more confident and full of life than ever before. This is a small window into the life of a very gifted and talented artist.
I have to confess, I have never listened to any of Juliana Hatfield's music. Not because it isn't any good (far from it) but because I was simply unaware. I picked up this book out of pure curiosity. Being a struggling artist myself, the description on the back of the book interested me greatly. Though at first I worried that perhaps it would be too self-indulgent (yet another disgruntled performer complaining about why they never became a huge sensation) I couldn't have been more further from the truth, and found this book hard to put down as I was reading it. I kept wanting to find out more about Juliana. Towards the middle of the book I had to force myself to slow down in order to savor everything more deeply. Each chapter is quite interesting, with so many intriguing and fascinating stories to uncover. I found Miss Hatfield herself to be quite likable as well as a very nice person. She reveals many different sides of herself in this memoir, and even the less flattering views are understood and respected as you read them. The woman has a good heart and a rich soul. She'll complain to her crew, at times during the tour, due to lack of food or fatigue, etc, only to feel extremely guilt ridden having done so, and apologize shortly thereafter. You cannot dislike her. The self-criticism she evokes upon herself throughout the book is both humbling and genuine.
Every struggling artist should read this book. It will speak to you in so many different ways and fill you with a newfound hope, especially when your own life's pursuits seem at their bleakest. This is a woman who suffered through it all, and not only survived but continually persevered, and ultimately succeeded. I truly connected with her on a very personal level, and felt the pain and hardship of her life as well as the triumphs and victories. Get this book and discover, for yourself, the amazing journey of this talented woman. It is truly inspiring. Thank You, Juliana Hatfield.
When I Grow Up - A Memoir
"I went out looking for an audience and I found them, just as they found me. Now I am by myself, and I can feel it: it is as it should be. When-if-I decide to come back, they will come, too."
- J.Hatfield
Also Recommended:
How To Walk Away (2008)
The White Broken Line: live recordings (2007)
Sittin' in a Tree... EP (2007)
Made in China (2005)
In Exile Deo (2004)
Gold Stars 1992-2002 (2002)
Bed (1998)
Only Everything (1995)
Become What You Are (1993)
Hey Babe (1992)
Excellent memoir by a talented artist September 16, 2008 TheBandit (SEA-TAC) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I got this on a whim - I was somewhat a fan of Juliana Hatfield's back in my college days. I had a couple of her albums. I didn't really follow her career after that. If you were into 'alt rock' in the early-to-mid '90s you might remember songs like "My Sister" or "Universal Heartbeat." I'm glad I read this, it is an excellent memoir that accomplishes two very important things. First, it inspired me to check out more of Hatfield's music, as she has consistently released new albums. Second, it read like the genuine voice of the author. What I mean is, since I obviously don't know Juliana Hatfield personally, it didn't have the bland ghost-written generic feel of so many celeb/artist/entertainer autobiographies.
The book is structured in a non-linear way, alternating (for the most part) between a chapter regarding Hatfield's past, followed by a chapter regarding a recent tour. It skips what I find to be usually the least interesting part of a bio: the early childhood years before the subject started doing what it is you're probably reading the book to find out about. Aside from a few anecdotes, the earliest stories told by Hatfield are during her college years right before forming her first band Blake Babies.
I found the book very interesting because most of the artist autobiographies I've read were of very well known people. This book provides a very detailed look at the career of a talented singer/musician/songwriter who had a very brief flirtation with stardom only to find herself a relative obscurity for the rest of her career. This is not about rock star debauchery and excess. These stories of Hatfield's life are crammed full of the minutia you usually don't hear about in the books of better known stars. I say that as a good thing. Throughout the book, I felt like a was getting a pretty good idea of what Hatfield is like as a person. That's a good sign when reading someone's memoir. I imagine a lot of this stuff was culled from years of religiously kept journals. It's all so detailed.
This is a good book to read for popular music fans in general, even if your awareness of Juliana Hatfield is limited. She writes in depth about the music industry and it's many pitfalls - the way non-mainstream artists like her have a way of falling through the cracks.
Don't I merit a mention... September 22, 2008 James E. Stevenson (Pittsburgh, PA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is simply a must for any Hatfield fan; like her music, she manages to be funny and heart breaking all at the same time. Every other chapter is a diary/chronicle of a tour from several years ago - in between snippets of various high/low points in her prolific career. She remains incredibly perceptive to all that's going on around her; her descriptions (straight down to the tacky Cracker Barrel's and less than comfortable Red Roof Inn's) are spot-on.
Favorite chapters include her in-depth description of what went on with the now shelved "God's Foot" album, her bout with debilitating depression around the time of Only Everything, and her fight with anorexia. She really holds nothing back here, her candor is completely charming. It's nice to finally get to know the woman behind some of my favorite songs and albums.
What's it REALLY like to be a rock star? October 26, 2008 Alan M. Hochberg (Harrisburg, PA United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a very entertaining and thoughtfully-written book about Juliana Hatfield as a work in progress. It is a book about someone caught in the middle: Someone who has made it big enough that everybody knows her name, but not Elton John, private-jet big. Someone who has enough neuroses to make finding love a challenge, but not enough to create drug-and alcohol-fueled self-destruction. It is apparently an honest book that is neither self-serving nor overly modest. It is a amusing and informative about Juliana, and about the world of alternative rock, with discourses on music in 5/4 time and the evils of Clear Channel. There is a bit of repetitiveness (yet another cramped dressing room and stale sandwiches in another backwater city?), but the book is fun to read, with just enough seriousness to make you think a little. (I took it on vacation with me and it was a perfect read.) It will be even more fun to listen to her music now, and to see what the next chapter of Juliana Hatfield's career brings.
A penetrating glimpse inside the life of an American rock icon April 29, 2009 M. Holtz (NYC) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
A major signpost in the career of an American pop/rock cultural icon, and in the life of an honest, struggling musician.
Juliana Hatfield remains one of the least understood and under-appreciated talents in the American indie pop/rock music scene. But as the book reveals, some of that under-appreciation can be attributed to her own idiosyncracies, personal struggles, and the timing of life events on her career path. But she has persevered and mananged to continue making a living producing her very own kind of music and building a devoted fan-base, however varied and indiosyncratic they may be themselves.
Fortunately for her fans, this book goes a long way in balancing out the biographical and personal aspect, as has her recent blogging. We can only hope that this, along with the simultaneous release of 'How To Walk Away,' the most mature, well-written and -produced album of her career, will help on the appreciation front as well.
The underlying thread of 'When I Grow Up' is one that we all share, the journey of self-understanding and acceptance, and learning to deal, and function, with our inner and outer struggles. It just so happens that her story takes place during the ups and downs of a music career, spent in large part in the virtual barren wasteland of small rock clubs.
Being a devoted fan and having followed her career since she went solo in the early 90's, I could almost perceive the personal progression evident in the book reflected in her music and personality on stage, but not quite.
For the most part, her songs are not as personally revealing as we might have imagined them to be, so to even her greatest fans this book will at once be revelatory and comforting. She is who we (mostly) believed her to be: a thoughtful, honest, interesting and somewhat troubled person, who struggled to figure out what she wanted in this life, and how to achieve it.
For the sake of her fans, and for the culture of rock music, we can only hope she continues to do her thing in poetry & prose.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 47
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