CLOSURE: Central Library will be closed Tuesday, July 21, through Saturday, July 25, while emergency repairs are made to the building’s cooling system. We expect to reopen Monday, July 27. Click for more details on holds, program schedules, and returns during the closure. 

The man of many fathers : life lessons disguised as a memoir

Author

Roy Wood

Call Number

  • 921 W8789 (CEN, POW)

Browse similar titles by call number

Edition

First edition.

Publication Information

New York : Crown, [2025]

Physical Description

269 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm

Summary

"From comedian, Emmy-nominated writer and producer, and former Daily Show correspondent Roy Wood Jr., an unforgettable, laugh-out-loud funny memoir revealing that sometimes the best advice comes from the most surprising teachers. When Roy Wood Jr. held his baby boy for the first time, he was relieved that his son was happy and healthy, but he felt a strange mix of joy and apprehension. Roy's own father, a voice of the civil rights movement in Birmingham, Alabama, had passed away when Roy was sixteen. There were gaps in the lessons passed down from father to son and, holding his own child, Roy wondered: Have I managed to fill in those blanks, to learn the lessons I will one day need to teach my boy? So Roy looked back to figure out who had taught him lessons throughout his life and which he could pass down to his son. Some of his father figures were clear, like a colorful man from Philadelphia navigating life after prison, who taught Roy the value of having a vision for his life, or his fellow comedians, who showed him what it took to make it as a working stand-up performer. Others were less obvious, from the teenage friends who convinced him to race 'leaf boats' carrying lit matches in the middle of a drought to a drug-addicted restaurant colleague who played hoops while Roy scoured dirty dishes to big names in Hollywood, like Trevor Noah and more. In The Man of Many Fathers, Roy shares what he's learned with humor and heart, delivering the most memorable lessons, such as how to channel anger through a more successful outlet (hint: never ever try to outfox a single mom), how not to get caught snitching (hint: never snitch), and how to become a good man--and a good dad (hint: listen to your fathers)."--Provided by publisher.

Contents

  • A letter to my son
  • The doo-doo green Cutlass Supreme
  • The fire boat race of 1985
  • Welcome to Birmingham
  • Thanks a million
  • The cook and the creep
  • The legend of Cocaine Mike
  • The final baked potato
  • No fear
  • Old caterpillar
  • Lessons of the Golden Corral
  • The man from Philadelphia
  • Cry baby
  • A man of his word
  • Keeping the lights on
  • Gotta know when to go
  • A letter to my fathers.