"By turns hilarious, wrenching, and achingly tender, this is a memoir about family that turns the whole idea of family upside down. Bilton writes beautifully, with sharp insight and a light touch, about her harrowing, astonishing journey into understanding her parents, her (very) extended family, and herself."
--Susan Orlean, author of The Library Book
"Normal Family had me absolutely riveted from beginning to end. Chrysta Bilton has woven an impeccable narrative about the explosion of love, betrayal, and addiction--not to mention the menagerie of animals--that made up her madcap and calamitous childhood. The story is dominated by Bilton's hedonistic, cult-inclined, womanizing, unstable and uncanny lesbian single mother, who had to make it up as she went along, and is surely one of the most mesmerizing 'characters' in recent memoir. Normal Family narrowly escapes being a tragedy, redeemed by Bilton's compassionate storytelling and unwavering love for her untraditional family."--Stephanie Danler, bestselling author of Stray and Sweetbitter
"Bilton's warts-and-all depiction is sometimes hilarious, sometimes horrifying, always grounded in extraordinary forgiveness and resilience...A wholly absorbing page-turner that everyone will want to read. You should probably buy two." --Kirkus Reviews, STARRED REVIEW
"Chrysta Bilton's astonishing, wildly unpredictable memoir NORMAL FAMILY starts out as rollicking and suspenseful and only ramps up from there, becoming by turns frightening, riotously funny, and finally quite moving." --Robert Kolker, New York Times bestselling author of Hidden Valley Road
"It's hard to put into words the many ways this book spoke to me. Normal Family reads like a thriller with its core mystery being the very meaning of life itself: vividly specific but also universal, with family as protagonist and antagonist, but always the hero."--Ry Russo-Young, filmmaker (Nuclear Family)
"Eloquently written and compulsively readable, Bilton's jaw-dropping coming-of-age memoir--and the love and survival found within its pages--is one readers won't soon forget."--Library Journal, STARRED REVIEW
"Every family is uniquely dysfunctional in its own way, but Bilton's might take the cake. In her fascinating memoir, the author writes of her unconventional upbringing and discovering her father had sired dozens of children."--USA TODAY, Best Books of Summer
"Bilton's twisty life story is fascinating, and her eye for detail and ability to plumb her painful past for meaning make this a riveting debut."--People Magazine
"This beautiful, warm, funny book is a testament to human resilience, forgiveness and humour. It is also a love letter to an extraordinary mother."--Marianne Power, TIMES (UK)
"I thought my family was complicated until I read Chrysta Bilton's wonderful memoir about the unique--eccentric, wild, expansive--collection of irresistible characters in her life. Bilton has a big heart, gentle wisdom, keen eye and lovely wit. She's a gifted writer with an astonishing story to tell."--David Sheff, NYT bestselling author of Beautiful Boy
"shines a much-needed light on the impact of the secretive, unregulated world of sperm donations...Bilton's deeply human narratives so aptly convey[s]...no one should ever be in the dark about his or her own origins."--Gabrielle Glaser, NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
"This remarkable and wise book is actually two memoirs, braided together with such tendresse that readers will come to believe the ironic title in earnest. Born via turkey baster to a lesbian mother with countless connections and even more schemes, Chrysta and her younger sister didn't learn until decades later that their family secrets included one that would change everything, including their definition of 'family.'"
--Bethanne Patrick, LOS ANGELES TIMES
"It's an extraordinary memoir about identity, family secrets, the nature of love and forgiveness, and resilience that's alternatively hilarious and heartbreaking, redemptive and triumphant. I couldn't stop turning the pages, and never stopped thinking about this story long after I finished."--Aviva Loeb, WASHINGTON POST
"At age 23, the author learned that, owing to her estranged father's prolific (and unregulated) sperm donations, she has at least 150 half-siblings -- and that's not even the most fascinating element of this memoir, which chronicles her bohemian upbringing in Los Angeles, floating between a hippie counterculture, rich private school kids, and even the occasional celebrity crew."--Seija Rankin, THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER