Stories I Only Tell My FriendsAn Autobiography

Rob Lowe

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Summary

Stories I Only Tell My Friends

By: Rob Lowe

Narrarated by: Rob Lowe

A wryly funny and surprisingly moving account of an extraordinary life lived almost entirely in the public eye

A teen idol at fifteen, an international icon and founder of the Brat Pack at twenty, and one of Hollywood’s top stars to this day, Rob Lowe chronicles his experiences as a painfully misunderstood child actor in Ohio uprooted to the wild counterculture of mid-seventies Malibu, where he embarked on his unrelenting pursuit of a career in Hollywood.

The Outsiders placed Lowe at the birth of the modern youth movement in the entertainment industry. During his time on The West Wing, he witnessed the surreal nexus of show business and politics both on the set and in the actual White House. And in between are deft and humorous stories of the wild excesses that marked the eighties, leading to his quest for family and sobriety.

Never mean-spirited or salacious, Lowe delivers unexpected glimpses into his successes, disappointments, relationships, and one-of-a-kind encounters with people who shaped our world over the last twenty-five years. These stories are as entertaining as they are unforgettable.

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Audiobook Information
EDITOR'S PICK // New York Times Best Seller
  • Edition: Unabridged
  • Author: Rob Lowe (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Nov 16, 2011
  • Publisher: Macmillan Audio
  • Genre: Personal Memoir, Music & Entertainment Biography, Biography & Memoir

Total File Size: 252 MB (7 files) Total Length: 9 Hours, 10 Minutes

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Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

12.20.11
Rob Lowe, Stories I Only Tell My Friends
2011 | Label: Macmillan Audio

An entertaining memoir of a serious thespian trapped in the body of a teen idol
Rob Lowe understands if you have a hard time taking him seriously. Looking back in his upbeat and quite entertaining memoir, he has a hard time, too — a serious thespian trapped in the body of a teen idol, a kid who makes up for his geekiness big-time once killer chin and ice-blue eyes begin to announce themselves to any number of gorgeous women, on and off-set. At one point, co-hosting a fundraiser in Canada with Princess Stephanie of Monaco — with whom he has been carrying on a month-long affair — he approaches Gregory Peck, Robert Wagner, Cary Grant, and Prince Rainier to thank them for a wonderful evening. As he leaves, he hears Wagner mutter, “Ya know, guys, I think that kid’s banged every one of our daughters.” He has, though he’s gentleman enough to leave out the sordid details.

Lowe’s accentuating-the-positive means we get only the bare minimum on the videotaped sex scandal with a pair of women, one underage, during the 1988 presidential campaign (lifelong Democrat Lowe was stumping for Michael Dukakis). But Stories I Only Tell My Friends hardly skimps on dirt, as when the author dishes on his “fairly friendly but simmering rivalry” with Michael J. Fox, with whom he butts heads by “debating whose movie themes were better”: John Parr’s “Man in Motion,” from St. Elmo’s Fire, or Huey Lewis & the News’s “The Power of Love.” “Hey, Teen Wolf, what time is it?” asks Lowe, to which Fox shoots back, “Screw off! You’ve made seven movies. My last one [Back to the Future] made more than all of yours combined!”

Lowe isn’t always a sparkling stylist, but he’s sharp, aware, and — deliberate omissions to the side — unself-important about his work and his time in rehab during 1990 for excessive drinking. “[B]eing in treatment lets my real self emerge,” he writes. “But first, it will have to gradually strangle the good-looking, successful, charming poster-boy pod person that stunted its growth many years ago.” Looks like he did a good job of it.

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