Then Again

Diane Keaton

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Summary

Then Again

By: Diane Keaton

Narrarated by: Diane Keaton

Mom loved adages, quotes, slogans. There were always little reminders pasted on the kitchen wall. For example, the word THINK. I found THINK thumbtacked on a bulletin board in her darkroom. I saw it Scotch-taped on a pencil box she’d collaged. I even found a pamphlet titled THINK on her bedside table. Mom liked to THINK.

So begins Diane Keaton’s unforgettable memoir about her mother and herself. In it you will meet the woman known to tens of millions as Annie Hall, but you will also meet, and fall in love with, her mother, the loving, complicated, always-thinking Dorothy Hall. To write about herself, Diane realized she had to write about her mother, too, and how their bond came to define both their lives. In a remarkable act of creation, Diane not only reveals herself to us, she also lets us meet in intimate detail her mother. Over the course of her life, Dorothy kept eighty-five journals—literally thousands of pages—in which she wrote about her marriage, her children, and, most probingly, herself. Dorothy also recorded memorable stories about Diane’s grandparents. Diane has sorted through these pages to paint an unflinching portrait of her mother—a woman restless with intellectual and creative energy, struggling to find an outlet for her talents—as well as her entire family, recounting a story that spans four generations and nearly a hundred years.

More than the autobiography of a legendary actress, Then Again is a book about a very American family with very American dreams. Diane will remind you of yourself, and her bonds with her family will remind you of your own relationships with those you love the most.

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EDITOR'S PICK // New York Times Best Seller
  • Edition: Unabridged
  • Author: Diane Keaton (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Nov 14, 2011
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Genre: Music & Entertainment Biography, Performing Arts, Personal Memoir, Biography & Memoir

Total File Size: 224 MB (7 files) Total Length: 8 Hours, 10 Minutes

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Alice Gregory

eMusic Contributor

Alice Gregory is a Brooklyn-based freelancer. She's written for a variety of publications including New York, NPR, Details, and The New York Observer.

12.06.11
Diane Keaton, Then Again
2011 | Label: Random House Audio

Intimate and utterly all-consuming
In the three decades since Diane Keaton seduced America with her sweetly stammering Annie Hall, she’s beguiled a number of “unattainable greats” as well: Woody Allen, Warren Beatty, Al Pacino, Jack Nicholson, even Steve Jobs. “Talent is just so damn attractive,” she offers as an organizing principle to her love life. But Then Again, her new memoir, is much more than a catalog of her Hollywood affairs. Though Keaton does disclose fun tidbits about her former paramours (she loved Woody Allen’s body and taught Al Pacino how to drive), the book is less about her romantic life than her family life.

It might be necessary even to qualify the term “memoir.” Then Again requires some hyphenated descriptions: “half-posthumous” perhaps, and maybe even “co-written.” Keaton’s writing partner is Dorothy Hall, her ever-encouraging and optimistic mother, who died in 2008 after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s. As she pores over decades of her mother’s journals — 85 in all — Keaton comes to know a familiar but still-strange figure: “Mom,” surely, but also a woman of creative temperament and thwarted ambition, a housewife with internal conflicts she never allowed herself to betray, and a darker sense of humor than Keaton ever suspected. “Those pictures are just as I expected — awful.” Dorothy writes in a letter. “Diane looks kind of funny. I’m not going to send them ’cause you’ll think I’ve been kidding you about how cute she is.” Such personal gems aren’t few and far between, either; they’re embedded throughout the book. Part-paean, part-autobiography, Then Again — read by Keaton herself — is intimate but sprightly and utterly all-consuming.

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