RECENTLY, WHILE STROLLING IN THE DEPTHS OF the San Fernando Valley, I saw a sidewalk stencil that said, "Not all cults are bad." I had to laugh. In my memoir, I revisited the old territory of growing up the daughter of a rock icon who I always saw as one part Spock and one part Jesus. I didn't just compete for his affection in my childhood home, I battled the fervent flock he ministered to, his fans, proselytizing to the feverish believers with his acerbic, satiric siren songs.
My family dynamic was not dissimilar to a cult. I willingly ate, slept, drank and lived for our larger-than-life leader. Only ours was the good kind because I couldn't get enough of my father's gallows humor and unending output of creativity.
Each album in my father's vast catalog is a time capsule, each tune a memory generator transporting me to a fixed location in space and time. Sometimes I'm as tall as his tibia listening to playback in his makeshift studio in our basement in what would become our Laurel Canyon compound. Or I'm suddenly 9 and sitting atop a big metal case on casters on the side of the stage at one of Frank's shows, watching my God-like father I idolized smoke and sermonize on his guitar.
I received my first journal when I was 5, with an inscription from my blood hero in Frank's beautiful block script in black ink. When I wasn't writing short stories about my imaginary camels T'Mershi Duween and Sinini, or drawing myself dressed as a nun, I was crudely sketching [mom] Gail and Frank sideways and naked, stacked on a mattress like pancakes from Du-par's.
Later, in my teens, my journals became a record of my father's whereabouts and my subsequent complaints about his absence. In a touring cycle, he might stay gone for the better part of a year, with only the briefest returns, a bird alighting on a branch.
This story is from the September 27, 2024 edition of Newsweek Europe.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the September 27, 2024 edition of Newsweek Europe.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The SECOND COMING
As he returns to the Oval Office, DONALD TRUMP has promised 'a golden age' after he was 'saved by God to make America great again.' Is his optimism justified?
Morris Chestnut
FROM BOYZ N THE HOOD IN 1991 UNTIL NOW, MORRIS CHESTNUT HAS SEEN much of Hollywood.
MOST TRUSTED BRANDS 2025
RUST IS A CORNERSTONE OF MEANINGFUL RELAtionships. When dealing with businesses and brands, it's often the deciding factor that separates the companies we rely on from the ones we don't.
Chatbot Therapy
Could artificial intelligence replace human support for mental health care? Newsweek asked the experts
Mark-Paul Gosselaar
HE'S BEEN IN THE BUSINESS FOR MORE THAN 40 years, but Mark-Paul Gosselaar still feels like he hasn't experienced everything.
Failed Lovers, Lifelong Friends
'What initially attracted you to a person need not be wasted...it can be used to build something new'
Animal Instincts
Primates practice different mating styles but empowered females help create harmonious families. Humans could learn from them
TRUMP'S LICENSE TO DRILL
After pumping money into the election cycle, the oil and gas industry now want the president to follow through on his pledge
Look of the Future
Experts share their predictions for how evolution might affect the appearance of humans in 50,000 years' time
Kenya Barris
KENYA BARRIS, THE EMMY-NOMINATED CRE-ator of Black-ish, knows that him teaming up with Malcolm Gladwell for the new Audible series The Unusual Suspects is a bit of an odd pairing. “We’re actually not as odd, but it’s an interesting combination.” And their guest list is just as diverse, from entertainment figures like Jimmy Kimmel and Ava DuVernay to renowned chef David Chang.