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Yossarian Slept Here: When Joseph Heller was Dad and Life was a Catch-22 [Paperback]

Erica Heller
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Book Description

6 Oct 2011

'You're Joseph Heller's daughter? How terrific!'

But was there a catch?

Like his most famous work, Joseph Heller was a study in contradictions: eccentric, brilliant and voracious, but also mercurial, competitive, and stubborn, with a love of mischief that sometimes cut too close to the bone. Yossarian Slept Here is a daughter's darkly funny, poignant memoir about growing up a Heller - from her colourful family members and her parents' tumultuous marriage, to her father's celebrity friends and the family's eccentric neighbours.

This is a story about achieving a dream, about fame and its aftermath, about squandered opportunities, lasting love and family.


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Yossarian Slept Here: When Joseph Heller was Dad and Life was a Catch-22 + Catch-22: 50th Anniversary Edition
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  • Catch-22: 50th Anniversary Edition £6.29


Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage (6 Oct 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0099570084
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099570080
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 2 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 526,199 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

"A finely crafted, wonderfully observed reminiscence on an extraordinary, often traumatic life" (Independent on Sunday )

"An affectionate, no-punches-pulled, often hilarious memoir" (Herald )

"Both charming and combative" (New York Times )

"As soon as I read the opening I was determined and eager to consume everything that followed, up to and including the Pot Roast" (Christopher Hitchens, Author Of Hitch-22 )

"Heller's domestic side is evoked with painful detail by his daughter, Erica, in her well written, occasionally harrowing memoir, Yossarian Slept Here" (Sunday Times )

Book Description

A fascinating, moving and witty memoir by Joseph Heller's daughter, about life with her famous father.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful read 17 Sep 2011
By Marlowe
Format:Hardcover
This book is not just a great read but it gives a wonderful insight into the life and work of Joseph Heller from the point of view of a husband and a father and it sets him into a family environment, it gives him a more human dimension. The book is written with great humour even when talking about difficult topics like illness and divorce. I recommend this book very highly.
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Amazon.com: 4.7 out of 5 stars  39 reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Yossarian's Daughter 18 Aug 2011
By Daniel H. Setzer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
We all like to read about the lives of great creative artists. Our brains are wired to respond to stories about other people's lives and we always feel that we just might get a glimpse of the mysterious creative spark that made them great. There is always the hope that we might uncover the secret and make use of it to achieve our own greatness. We are always ultimately disappointed. The creative process is too well hidden and mysterious. However, one thing is clear; creativity does not arise from joy and contentment. It comes from a darker place.

Erica Heller has given us a jewel of a memoir about her life as the daughter of perhaps the greatest novelist of the last half of the 20th century.

Her prose is crystal clear and she stays tightly focused on her subject. She has a master's touch when writing about her wacky family members and their foibles, and she has the eloquence to wring every last drop of humor and comedy out of their doings with just a few deft phrases.

This is not an exposé or 'tell all' book. Ms Heller takes a very realistic if not objective view of past events. She is truthful, direct and does not try to paint herself in a favorable light. She owns up to her misjudgments and does not try to gloss over unpleasant facts. Her father was always difficult to gauge. He could be in turns very generous and considerate, or if the winds of his inner emotions were blowing in the wrong direction, he could be bitingly caustic and seemingly unfeeling. His barbs struck to the quick and were very, very funny...as long as you were not the target.

Joseph Heller and his wife Shirley had a great love affair during their 30+ years of marriage. During that time they lived at the venerable Apthorp Apartments on Broadway. Erica paints a loving portrait of the Apthorp, where she lives even today, and makes it almost a living character in the history of her family. She tells of her parents first meeting and struggles until he managed to publish what became known in the family as, "The Book." The Book brought them fame and fortune. Erica recounts dozens of anecdotes about many of the great creative minds of the century who dropped in and out of her life.

This book is a 'must' for anyone with an interest in Joseph Heller. It is also a 'must' for anyone who has an interest in the human heart. It teaches us about the resilience of the heart and the unconditional love of a daughter for her father.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars YOSSARIAN SLEPT HERE ---- a Memoir Worth Reading 20 Sep 2011
By HARP - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Imagine, as a visual image, balancing with one toe (the big one of course) on the head of a pin -- one arm reaching forward and the opposite leg extended backward in a perfect arabesque. That's the kind of balancing act Erica Heller has pulled off with Yossarian Slept Here, her insightful, totally honest memoir about her life as the daughter of renowned writer Joseph Heller and his wife Shirley. She makes sure you know that her father does love her, in spite of his insensitivity, frequently bordering on cruelty, and almost complete lack of parenting skills. As Blake Bailey points out, in her review of Yossarian Slept Here, (New York Times Book Review, Sunday, August 28, 2011), "The miracle of this memoir is that it never seems less than fair: Erica Heller's worst grievances are mentioned more in sorrow (or levity) than anger, and she's careful to give her own shortcomings their due."
She also writes with affection and empathy about the many other colorful members of her unique family.

Erica Heller has a powerful story to tell and the ability to make the reader want to hear it. She's a wonderful writer --- smart and funny (her analogies are hilarious). It would be great to hear more from her, in the form of a novel next time. She could probably write a great screenplay as well.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars This energetic, often moving work is a good argument for the existence of a writing gene 31 Aug 2011
By Bookreporter - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
A few weeks ago in this space, I had the pleasure of reviewing JUST ONE CATCH, Tracy Daugherty's biography of Joseph Heller. Heller's daughter Erica's sometimes scarifying, but often hilarious, memoir of life in the Heller household is a worthy companion to that volume, providing some of the brushstrokes and shading to complete Daugherty's more comprehensive portrait. What's most satisfying is that Erica is no talentless celebrity offspring who has cobbled together some sensational revelations with the help of a ghostwriter to even the score with her famous father. Instead, this energetic, often moving, work is a good argument for the existence of a writing gene.

"YOSSARIAN SLEPT HERE captures the challenge of growing up a Heller: exhilarating, frustrating and painful, but never, ever dull."
While Erica's memoir follows a generally chronological path, she has a knack for the well-timed detour to share a punchy anecdote, and without doubt has inherited her father's talent for comic writing. There's the hilarious story of her disastrous attempt to crash Woody Allen's 1980 New Year's Eve party and one of an uncomfortable lunch as a teenager with Gene Wilder. She revels in telling how her father "paid twice" when she sold back to him the furniture her mother had removed from the family's East Hampton home after the divorce. But the most striking story tells of the highly original revenge her grandmother (a colorful character in her own right) wreaked on pictures of Joe after he divorced her daughter.

One story in Daugherty's biography that's missing here, curiously, deals with the article Erica wrote for Harper's in 1974 after the publication of her father's second novel, SOMETHING HAPPENED. Erica describes the book, which contains a chapter entitled "My Daughter Is Unhappy," as "569 pages of hilarious, mordant, caustically wrapped, smoldering rage." Convinced the character was modeled on her, she plaintively asked her father, "How could you write about me that way?" His tart reply, "What makes you think you're interesting enough to write about?" is about as accurate a summary of what this book suggests it must have felt like to grow up as Joseph Heller's daughter as one can imagine.

Erica's memoir is especially rich in its depiction of her parents' marriage, the paradigm of two people intensely in love with each other who simply couldn't live together. Joseph Heller worked in the advertising world portrayed in "Mad Men," and when it came to his relationships with women --- both his wife and the ladies who provided frequent diversions --- his values clearly were shaped by that culture. In the midst of his bitter divorce and his simultaneous battle with Guillain-Barré syndrome, Erica tells of his implausible denial of an affair with a North Carolina daughter she nicknames "Dr. Bugs." Shirley, his wife of nearly four decades, was a beautiful, talented woman whose spirit ultimately was crushed by the weight of living with a man whose world was "a dictatorship, where the currency was frequently sarcasm and a coruscating wit --- snarling, brutish, yet often impossible, improbably, delightfully, and deliriously funny."

But despite all the times he was cold and distant, and the pain he almost seemed to relish inflicting on the people who loved him most, there's no denying the kindnesses --- helping her gain admission to NYU or tipping the apartment staff at Christmas when she was unemployed --- he offered her. Perhaps it's for that reason, despite all logic, that she's conflicted when she's called upon to testify against him in the divorce proceeding, realizing that he was a man "whom I loved even if I didn't always understand him."

Apart from her stories about her father, Erica is frank about her own struggles --- the mediocre academic performance that nearly had her studying agriculture at Itawamba Community College, in Fulton, Mississippi, her breast cancer, and a short and disastrous mid-life marriage to an "art director, skydiver and artist" from the Netherlands she met online.

But one of the most distinctive characters in Erica's memoir has to be the Apthorp, a "quirky, iconic, and grand Manhattan apartment building rich in fascinating anecdotes and gossip," where the Hellers first moved in 1952, the year of Erica's birth, and where she lives to this day. The family's movements from one apartment to another mirror the rise in Joseph Heller's literary fortunes and the decline in Shirley's economic status after the couple's divorce in 1984, as well as Erica's determination to maintain a precarious hold in a smaller space there after her mother died.

Whether it's Erica's startling revelation about her encounter with CATCH-22 or the story of a long-running battle over a pot roast recipe, YOSSARIAN SLEPT HERE captures the challenge of growing up a Heller: exhilarating, frustrating and painful, but never, ever dull.

--- Reviewed by Harvey Freedenberg
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