Destroy This House, Amanda Uhle
Destroy This House, Amanda Uhle
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Destroy This House
A Memoir

Author: Amanda Uhle

Narrator: Rebekkah Ross

Unabridged: 11 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/26/2025


Synopsis

“Incredible…riveting.” —Dax Shepard, Armchair Expert podcast

For fans of The Glass Castle and The Liars’ Club, a tender, heartbreaking, and hilarious memoir chronicling the challenges of growing up with a desperately scheming father, a mother plagued by an acute hoarding disorder, and parenting parents while seeking independence.

The Long family’s love was fierce, their lifestyle bizarre, and their deceptions countless. Once her parents were gone, Amanda Uhle realized she was closer to them than anyone else, yet she found herself utterly confounded by the lives they had led.

Amanda’s striving fashion designer mother and her charismatic wheeler-dealer father wove a complex life together that spanned ten different homes across five states over forty perplexing years. Throughout her childhood, as her mother’s hoarding disorder flourished and her father’s schemes crumbled, contradictions abounded. They bartered for dental surgery and drove their massive Lincoln Town Car to the food bank. When financial ruin struck, they abandoned their repossessed mansion for humble parish housing, and Amanda’s father became a preacher. They swung between being filthy rich and dirt poor, devious and virtuous, lonely and loved, fake and real.

In Destroy This House, Amanda sets out to document her parents’ unbelievable exploits and her own hard-won escape into independence. With humor and tenderness, Uhle has crafted a heartfelt and utterly unique memoir, capturing the raucousness, pain, joy, and ultimately, the boundless love that exists between all parents and children.

About Amanda Uhle

Amanda Uhle writes about culture, politics, and civil rights for The Washington Post, POLITICO, The Boston Globe, and Newsweek. Uhle is coeditor of the I, Witness series of first-person stories by youth activists, former director of the 826michigan youth writing and tutoring program, and cofounder, with Dave Eggers, of the International Congress of Youth Voices. Their work with youth writing organizations worldwide is documented in Unnecessarily Beautiful Spaces for Young Minds on Fire. Uhle is the publisher and executive director of McSweeney’s, an independent nonprofit publisher of distinctive books and magazines.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Holden on February 22, 2025

3.5 ⭐️ I am always so drawn to dysfunctional family memoirs, especially when there is any focus on mothers. I assume this is my trauma manifesting and looking for some common ground and relatability. I can only imagine how healing it must be to finally get it all out in a memoir and to see so many o......more

Goodreads review by Cynthia on February 08, 2025

Reminded me of Tara Westover’s Educated, and The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls.......more

Goodreads review by Jenée on April 02, 2025

Reviewing memoirs is always a sticky spot. I want to acknowledge what the author went through and never want to give a poor review, because it was their experience. I was hoping for more depth on how she was deeply effected by her mothers hoarding habits and her fathers multiple failed business vent......more

Goodreads review by Sharon on December 27, 2024

I found this book an easy, if disturbing read. The author lived a very strange life with her parents and is in retrospect attempting to understand their actions. Gathered from hoarded belongings were records of financial disasters, lives that were lived always in pursuit of something, and a with a c......more

Goodreads review by Brian on August 26, 2025

Publication day for an incredible memoir - highest recommendation.......more