Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 6 reviews on
Dustin Lance Black wrote the Oscar-winning screenplay for Milk and helped overturn California's anti-gay marriage Proposition 8, but as an LGBTQ activist he has unlikely origins--a conservative Mormon household outside San Antonio, Texas. There he was raised by a single mother who, as a survivor of childhood polio, endured brutal surgeries as well as braces and crutches for life. Despite the abuse and violence of two questionably devised Mormon marriages, she imbued Lance with her inner strength and irrepressible optimism.
When Lance came out to his mother at age twenty-one, she initially derided his sexuality as a sinful choice. It may seem like theirs was a house destined to be divided--and at times it was. But in the end, they did not let their differences define them or the relationship that had inspired two remarkable lives. This heartfelt, deeply personal memoir explores how a mother and son built bridges across great cultural divides--and how our stories hold the power to heal.
Fighting for Equality & Justice • Former President, Human Rights Campaign • @Georgetownsfs Grad • Clinton WH Alum • Strategist • Dog Dad • #BidenHarris • #BLM
It was an honor to watch my friend @DLanceBlack talk about his powerful new book at @PoliticsProse last night. “Mama’s Boy” is a beautiful example of the power of storytelling as a way to bridge divides — both in relationships and in politics. Congratulations my friend! https://t.co/l1fScZ5klQ
Founder/EIC of AwardsWatch | Tracking & predicting Oscars/Emmys/SAG and more | 🍅 | he/him | Member: @DorianAwards @HCAcritics | 🏳️🌈 | #BLM | #StopAsianHate
'Mama's Boy' review: Dustin Lance Black doc just barely balances line between being uplifting and a stilted vanity project | NewFest https://t.co/s1qiTGwv1J #NewFest
New account for @ThePlaylist (sadly suspended over BS, please follow). Please share. https://t.co/JLAeFbIgmM
‘Mama’s Boy’ Trailer: Screenwriter Dustin Lance Black Tells The Story Of His Mom, Mormonism, Gay Rights Activism & More https://t.co/Lmt3uinnoy https://t.co/NehMPSxBUH
"A fast read with witty observations, and all the emotions to go along. . . . [A] testament to the powerful impact a good parent has on children. . . . Black and Mama's Boy show just how far the unlikeliest of children can go with pure, unabashed grit."
--San Francisco Chronicle
"A fascinating and poignant combination of memoir and family history. . . . Both personal and universal. . . . The most emotional moments come as Black finds himself in personal encounters with those who might be considered obviously antagonistic to his world, including leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and more conservative members of his own family. . . . Finding common ground is indeed the powerful throughline in Mama's Boy."
--Salt Lake City Weekly
"Reverence is at [this memoir's] heart. . . . There would be ample room for Lance to boast in this memoir, but you wait for it in vain. He's done what he's done and, here, told us how, with film-industry luminaries and gay activist colleagues, but even more compellingly through his deep, unbroken involvement with his family of origin and the transfer of that experience to what is now his own family."
--The Bay Area Reporter
"A memoir of an enduring mother-son bond that transcends even the deepest ideological divides. . . . [A] heartfelt tribute."
--USA Today, "5 Books Not to Miss"
"A loving portrait of [the author's mother], a tiny, fierce woman who didn't let any of her challenges--including poverty, the polio that cost her the use of her legs, and two bad marriages--stop her from living a full life, setting an example for her three sons."
--San Antonio Express-News
"The story of how a mother and son came to reconcile their differences and realize the importance of family."
--NPR
"Dustin Lance Black's memoir comes at exactly the right time; his complicated, surprising, and ultimately touching journey with his mom is a great example in our ideologically divided times."
--Andy Cohen, author of Superficial and The Andy Cohen Diaries
"[A] sharp, affecting memoir."
--Town & Country
"Black's tender and heartfelt love letter to his remarkable mother is an act of courage and reclamation. It's a well-deserved tribute."
--New York Journal of Books
"At the center of this thought-provoking memoir, Black, who won an Academy Award for the screenplay for Milk, offers a heartfelt tribute to Anne, his courageously inspiring yet deeply religious and politically conservative mother. . . . Black provides a wholly engrossing account of how a mother and son evolved beyond their potentially divisive religious and political beliefs to uncover a source of strength and unity through their enduring bond. A terrifically moving memoir of the myriad complexities of family dynamics."
--Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Black grew up in the South, surrounded by stories--the telling sometimes fueled by Jack Daniels--that made people stronger. As a result, he fell in love with the magic of storytelling and has himself become a consummate storyteller, as he demonstrates in this beautifully written, vastly entertaining, and moving memoir. The most powerful stories are the most personal, Black believes, and, in that context, the most important figure in his story is his indomitable mother, who, a victim of childhood polio, had no use of her legs but refused to let that stop her. From her tough, stubborn heart, he inherited his own strong will and optimism. . . . Black seems incapable of writing a dull word as he evokes his stirring life and times, ultimately inspiring comity by word and example. His book belongs in every library."
--Booklist (starred review)
"Hang on to your apron strings, there hasn't been a more memorable Southern mother memoir since Rick Bragg's All Over but the Shoutin'. In Mama's Boy, Dustin Lance Black redefines Steel Magnolia. From page one, readers will root for this matriarch, who demurely ruled every room since she was a child."
--Helen Ellis, author of Southern Lady Code and American Housewife
"A magnificent achievement. I cannot remember a book where I cried so often. Brave, insightful, unflinching, funny, sad, triumphant . . . everything. And both a warning and a hope for the times to come."
--Stephen Fry, author of Heroes and More Fool Me