Leaving Breezy Street, Brenda MyersPowell
Leaving Breezy Street, Brenda MyersPowell
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Leaving Breezy Street
A Memoir

Author: Brenda Myers-Powell, April Reynolds

Narrator: Karen Chilton

Unabridged: 9 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/29/2021


Synopsis

"This is a full-bodied performance, complete with salty language and harrowing situations, but listeners will love Chilton's portrayal of Breezy's determination to find her place in the world." -- Audiofile Magazine, Earphones Award Winner

Belonging on the shelf with Jeannette Walls’s The Glass Castle and Ishmael Beah’s A Long Way Gone, Leaving Breezy Street—the stunning account of Brenda Myers-Powell’s brutal and beautiful life—is a critical addition to the American canon.

Fourteen years old, poor, Black, mother dead, two babies to feed and clothe, and a grandmother who is not full of motherly kindness, to put it mildly. What money-making options are open to a girl like Brenda Myers?

When Breezy, as she came to call herself, hit the streets of Chicago as a prostitute in 1973 she was barely a teenager. But she was pretty and funny as hell, and determined to support her daughters and make a living. For the next twenty-five years, she moved across the country, finding new pimps, parties, drugs, and endless, profound heartache. And she also—astonishingly—managed to find the strength to break from a brutal world and not only save herself but save future Breezys.

Great, compelling memoirs can bring us into worlds that have been beyond our comprehension and make us “get it.” What these books tell us is NOT that we can all move beyond the lives into which we were born. The lesson is that everyone deserves to be truly seen by others and offered a path forward.

A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt and Company

About Brenda Myers-Powell

Brenda Myers-Powell has been advocating for victims of sex trafficking since 1997. She is the founder and CEO of Ernestine's Daughter, previously served as the co-founder and executive director of the Dreamcatcher Foundation, and has sat on the board of numerous organizations. In 2020, she was selected to serve on the U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking. Brenda’s work with victims was the focus of the Sundance Award–winning documentary Dreamcatcher.

About April Reynolds

April Reynolds has taught at New York University, the 92nd Street Y, and is currently teaching creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College. Her short stories have appeared in several anthologies. She has gone on assignment for the US State Department to lecture on creative writing and her own works. Her first novel, Knee-Deep in Wonder, won the Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Foundation Award and the PEN/Open Book Beyond Margins Award. Her second book is The Shape of Dreams.

About Karen Chilton

Karen Chilton is a multi-talented author, actor, and audiobook narrator, as well as a freelance writer, script writer, and librettist. She wrote the biography Hazel Scott about the trailblazing jazz pianist and coauthored I Wish You Love with legendary jazz vocalist Gloria Lynne. Her acting credits include It's Kind of a Funny Story and Half Nelson. She won a New Professional Theatre Writers award for her play Convergence and an Audiofile Golden Earphones Award for her narration of Karolyn Smardz Frost's I've Got a Home in Glory Land. She has also narrated Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow and Jennifer Berry Hawes' Grace Will Lead Us Home: The Charleston Church Massacre and the Hard, Inspiring Journey to Forgiveness.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Pam on February 03, 2021

Leaving Breezy Street is an eye-opening, but brutally difficult, read. The subject matter -- human trafficking -- will rip your heart out. However, author Brenda Myers-Powell relates her life story in a humorous and salty manner that will have the reader laughing and gasping in horror at the same ti......more

Goodreads review by Sara on March 07, 2021

Brenda Myers-Powell's "Leaving Breezy Street" is a memoir about how events in the author's childhood led to a life of drugs, travel, and prostitution. The messages we receive as a society about people who grow up and become involved in drugs and prostitution neglect to mention the trauma that may le......more

Goodreads review by aPriL does feral sometimes on July 02, 2021

The autobiography ‘Leaving Breezy Street’ by Brenda Myers-Powell is both a terrible book and an educational book. I do not recommend it for those still suffering any kind of active PTSD currently, or those who are just beginning therapy because of trauma. However, it would be an instructive and vali......more

Goodreads review by Lacy on June 22, 2021

Leaving Breezy Street is heartbreaking. A memoir about a 14 year old girl who is motherless, and she had two kids of her own to take care of. Just a child herself she ends up in human trafficking as a means to provide for her family. The lifestyle leads her to more violence and eventually she finds......more

Goodreads review by Camie on July 11, 2021

I finished reading this because I received it as a ARC. It’s terrifically sad as the author was abused as a young girl and then lived for years as a prostitute and drug addict, and single mother who loses her first three daughters. In the last few chapters she pulls her life together, and perhaps in......more


Quotes

"This is a full-bodied performance, complete with salty language and harrowing situations, but listeners will love Chilton's portrayal of Breezy's determination to find her place in the world." -- Audiofile Magazine, Earphones Award Winner