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Learning to Think

A Memoir of Faith, Superstition, and the Courage to Ask Questions

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Set in 1980s Birmingham, England, a piercing memoir about the liberating power of a scientific view of the world.

Tracy King was raised in a house of contradictions—her family was happy and creative, yet shadowed by debt, phobias, her father's alcoholism, and the illusory promises of a born-again Christian church. The uneasy balance of the King household was irrevocably upended on a rainy spring night in 1988, when her father was killed by teenagers just blocks from their public housing estate.

Her mother's dysfunctional reliance on the church deepened following the tragedy, and King, suffering from undiagnosed anxiety, stopped attending school. The account of her father's death remained hazy, made worse by the fact that four of the accused teenagers—neighborhood boys she could not avoid—were never charged. What could have triggered such an act of aggression? Clinging to hearsay and what little information she had from the police, King allowed her imagination to fill in the rest.

Over the years, in a bid to balm her grief and gaps in formal education, King journeyed through multiple belief systems: she distanced herself from fundamentalism, searching for clarity instead in the occult, paranormal beliefs, and conspiracy theories. Amid the chaos of her coming of age, she stumbled upon a copy of Carl Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World on the shelves of a Birmingham bookshop —a discovery that proved transformative. Sagan's sage caveat, "But I could be wrong," became King's guiding light, empowering her to confront her demons.

An eloquently written and often sharply funny account that is ever sensitive to the fallibility of memory and the nuances of truth, Learning to Think is a resounding battle cry for the value of education and the freedom to think critically, imaginatively, and for oneself.
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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2024
      A British journalist recalls a childhood in public housing in the countryside outside Birmingham in the 1970s and '80s. King's father died when she was 12. First told that the death was the result of an aneurysm, and then that it was a murder, she only recently delved into the actual events of the death, finding an explanation she wasn't expecting. Her memoir, rigorous and compelling, falls into two parts: one in which she interrogates her memories, attempting to determine whether she has been deluding herself about what happened in the past, and another in which she researches her father's death, going back through the paperwork associated with it and interviewing the people who were there. At the center is an attempt to be fair to all the members of her family: the engineer father who drank heavily and couldn't hold a job, but who was kind to his wife and children; the agoraphobic mother who eventually freed herself; the sister who refused to go to school; and King herself, outgoing and sociable as a child but plagued by familial trauma. The author evenhandedly explores the influence of religion on the family, which belonged to a fundamentalist church led by a minister who conducted an exorcism on King shortly after her father's death. For King, the turning point that led her out of a chaotic life was when, after completing university and while working one of many short-lived jobs that followed, she read a book by Carl Sagan and was struck by the line, "but I could be wrong." Her own internalization of that sentiment led both to a career in science writing and to this memoir, which offers a careful deconstruction of the past. The book is all the more affecting due to King's determination to keep it low-key. A scrupulous, memorable account.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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