When everything fell apart for Lynn Melnick, she went to Dollywood. It
was perhaps an unusual refuge. The theme park, partly owned by and
wholly named for Dolly Parton, celebrates a country music legend who
grew up in church and in poverty in rural Tennessee. Yet Dollywood is
exactly where Melnick--a poet, urbanite, and daughter of a middle-class
Jewish family--needed to be. Because Melnick, like the musician she
adores, is a survivor.
In this bracing memoir, Melnick explores Parton's dual identities as
feminist icon and objectified sex symbol--identities that reflect the
author's own fraught history with rape culture and the grueling effort
to reclaim her voice in the wake of loss and trauma. Each chapter
engages with the artistry and cultural impact of one of Parton's songs,
as Melnick reckons with violence, creativity, parenting, abortion, sex
work, love, and the consolations and cruelties of religion. Guided by
Parton's music, Melnick walks the slow path to recovery in the company
of those who came before her and stand with her, as trauma is an
experience both unique and universal. Candid and discerning, I've Had
to Think Up a Way to Survive is at once a memoir and a love song--a
story about one life and about an artist who has brought life to
millions.