Paperback : $35.77
Lucky Jim is Jim Hart's memoir, the story of how he survived a violent childhood home, found incredible words inside him, created a love that was both so right and so wrong and finally found the strength to be his true self. Jim is a master at building relationships. Charming, funny and a great listener with a guru's insight, his success in life and business was based on his ability to connect with others, from people recovering in 12-step groups in Upstate New York to those living in the rarified air of Martha's Vineyard. But after 20+ years sober, one slip-up triggered an active addiction that threatened his relationships with his then wife, singer-songwriter, Carly Simon, his recovery friends, his severely disabled son and even with himself as he began to confront his sexuality.
Lucky Jim is Jim Hart's memoir, the story of how he survived a violent childhood home, found incredible words inside him, created a love that was both so right and so wrong and finally found the strength to be his true self. Jim is a master at building relationships. Charming, funny and a great listener with a guru's insight, his success in life and business was based on his ability to connect with others, from people recovering in 12-step groups in Upstate New York to those living in the rarified air of Martha's Vineyard. But after 20+ years sober, one slip-up triggered an active addiction that threatened his relationships with his then wife, singer-songwriter, Carly Simon, his recovery friends, his severely disabled son and even with himself as he began to confront his sexuality.
James Hart is a former business executive and CEO of the award-winning literary magazine, DoubleTake. His collection of poems, Milding, was published in 2004. For several years he was a board member of the National Council on Alcoholism, and in 2005 he cofounded of OUT for Work, a career fair development program for the LGBT community in New York City. Jim lives in New York City and is currently very active in the LGBT and recovery communities there.
A former business executive tells the moving story of his rise from
poverty to privilege and the secrets that haunted--and almost
destroyed--his life.Hart (Milding, 2004) met future wife Carly
Simon on a chance train ride to New York City. He had not known who
Simon was, only that he was profoundly attracted to her. A former
seminarian, the author was a divorced insurance salesman and sober
alcoholic with a mentally challenged son. His early life had been
marred by the alcoholism and violence of a father whose rages were
as unpredictable as the Atlantic, and Catholicism had been his
refuge. Simon, by contrast, lived a glamorous life as a famous
recording artist who had been married to singer James Taylor and
romanced by countless other stars, as well as the daughter of Simon
& Schuster co-founder Richard Simon. Despite their differences and
the fact that the author, who bore a striking resemblance to
Taylor, sometimes felt like a replacement for him, they married six
months after they met. For Hart, the main challenge was acclimating
to privilege and his sudden acquisition of the financial and
emotional support he needed to pursue his dream of writing a novel.
He soon discovered that his underlying attraction to men was also
an issue, but one he could not face. Painful fissures appeared in
his marriage to Simon and in his life; prescription painkillers,
hookups with gay men, and crack cocaine became his modes of escape.
Two decades after it began, his marriage ended, and he was forced
to confront three painful truths: that he was an addict and
homosexual who had failed the son he could not bring himself to
love. In this searching, honest, and emotionally nuanced narrative,
Hart navigates the struggle with his personal demons and the
celebrity world with which he unexpectedly became enmeshed with
elegance, grit, and artistry. The result is memoir that makes for
exceptionally poignant, lyrical reading.A finely written, painful,
but profound book. --Kirkus Review, February 1, 2017--
"Reviews"
He was poor and divorced and the dad of a special son when he met a
rich, beautiful, famous woman on a train. They fell in love and
married, which should have saved his life. He was twenty years
sober when he picked up a crack pipe for a year, which should have
killed him. There's a gritty and marvelous memoir in there, and
James Hart survived to write it--with grace, humor and a generous
dose of wonder. --Honor Moore, author of The Bishop's Daughter--
"Reviews"
I have heard the stories of Jim Hart's extraordinary and
far-reaching life--from the dark glamour of the Westies's Hell's
Kitchen through to the evanescent glamour of life with Carly Simon,
Jackie Onassis, Mike Nichols and others on Martha's Vineyard and in
Manhattan, and beyond. . . I am thrilled that others will now be
able to behold Jim's life and the stories; there is resonance--and
there are lessons--here. --Sheila Weller, author of Girls Like Us--
"Reviews"
Jim weaves his tale between the various seemingly opposing strands
of his life . . . Then there was our magical chance meeting and
marriage and life on Martha's Vineyard; his own struggles as a
writer and a harrowing relapse into active alcoholism, and
exploration of long-hidden parts of himself. Recovery comes with
loss. Time gives and takes away. And Jim's words chronicle with
rare lyricism and wit the feelings that these events evoke. --Carly
Simon-- "Reviews"
Jim writes with candor and clarity, drenching it--as he always did
with a story--with woe and wit and wonderful revelation. --William
Kennedy-- "Reviews"
The best memoirs take us on a journey of pursuit and struggle and
passion--to find oneself. From the train ride of the opening
chapter, Jim Hart's Lucky Jim rivets the reader as it hurtles down
the track: There is grace, love, crack, straight sex, gay sex,
bold-face names, heartbreak, and triumph in almost impossible
circumstances--the kind of life-stuff that suggests we are in for a
major ride, and then delivers. --Carl Bernstein-- "Reviews"
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |