Skip to main navigation Skip to main content

Taiwan Travelogue by Yáng Shuāng-zǐ, translated by Lin King has won the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature!!! Buy now

Book Title

A Lie About My Father

Subtitle
A Memoir
Author 1
John Burnside
Body
My father told lies all his life and, because I knew no better, I repeated them. Lies about everything, great and small, were the very fabric of my world.

The lie in the title of this astonishing memoir is born of shame. Traveling around upstate New York in the nineties, John Burnside can't bear to share the truth about his father during a casual conversation with a hitchhiker. He covers his uneasiness with a lie. It felt natural to do so.

His father, abandoned as a baby on a stranger's doorstep, created a masterful web of deceit to erase this unbearable fact. John, even as a child, represented everything that was wrong with the world and became the recipient of his father's self hatred in the form of enraged violence, and worse, petty, cruel belittlement. Growing up in the tough working class neighborhoods of Scotland and later England, John learned to lie back to his father, and later, about his father.

An internationally acclaimed poet, Burnside offers a candid and brave memoir about his extraordinary childhood. A Lie About My Father has received enormous praise in the UK where it has been heralded as a classic of its kind.

Share Title

List Price
$15.00
ISBN
ISBN
978-1-55597-467-1
Format
Format
Paperback
Publication Date
Publication Date
Subject
Pages
Pages
336
Trim Size
Trim Size
6 x 9
Keynote
A powerful, clear-eyed account of a father's cruelty and a son's survival.

About the Author

John  Burnside
Credit: Sue Jackson
John Burnside is a poet, fiction writer, and memoirist. His poetry has received the T. S. Eliot Prize, the Forward Prize, the Whitbread Poetry Award, and the Petrarca Preis. He lives in Fife, Scotland. His most recent collection is Black Cat Bone.
 
More by author

Praise

  • “A bitter, resentful, yet richly insightful and compassionate memoir of growing up in a coastal town in the East Midlands of England.”Sarah Kafatou, The Harvard Review
  • “This book demonstrates the resilience of the human spirit; the writing is upsetting, gripping, and startling.”—Library Journal
  • “John Burnside has written a brilliant, visceral memoir, balancing painful beauty with dark comedy. A writer of equal parts fierceness and delicacy, at times seemingly bewildered by the forms wreckage can take in this life, bewildered by the costs inherent in the seemingly simple act of telling stories, bewildered by the poetry coming out of his pen. A Lie About My Father shimmers with understated transcendence—a hell of a read.”—Nick Flynn
Back to Table of Contents