In this searing and darkly witty memoir, Wendy Lawless recounts her unconventional and often heartbreaking childhood with a glamorous but unstable, alcoholic, and suicidal mothera real-life blend of Holly Golightly and Mommie Dearestand the resilience that allowed her to survive.Georgann Rea didn't bake cookies or attend PTA meetings. She wore mink, smoked Dunhills from a silver holder, and moved through 1960s Manhattan society with icy elegance and reckless abandon. Beautiful, volatile, and emotionally absent, she chased romance and status while her daughters navigated a world shaped by addiction, neglect, and repeated suicide attempts. From the Dakota in New York City to London's swinging town houses, Wendy and her younger sister learned to read the shifting moods of a mother whose pursuit of glamour masked deep instability. With unflinching honesty and sharp intelligence, Wendy explores alcoholism, mental illness, mother-daughter trauma, and the complicated love that binds families togethereven when survival requires distance. A powerful coming-of-age memoir that reads like a novel' (Anne Korkeakivi, An Unexpected Guest) about dysfunctional family dynamics, childhood resilience, and rising above emotional chaos, this is the story of a daughter who refused to be defined by her mother's unraveling.