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OverviewA Wall Street Journal reporter confronts the most difficult source she's ever encountered, her own father, in this unsparing interrogation of the ways we deceive ourselves and others A stunning debut, perfect for fans of searing family memoirs that lift the veil of childhood, as in books by Nicole Chung and Ashley C. Ford A Wall Street Journal reporter confronts the most difficult source she's ever encountered, her own father, in this unsparing interrogation of the ways we deceive ourselves and others A stunning debut, perfect for fans of searing family memoirs that lift the veil of childhood, as in books by Nicole Chung and Ashley C. Ford Francesca's parents represented opposing world-views. Her mother always slid her way out of questions about the past, saying only ""My life started when you were born."" Her dad, an absent bodybuilder, loved telling stories about his seemingly larger-than-life past. He said he would tell her anything she wanted to know. But more often than not, it was a total lie. When Francesa was 9, he went to prison, and her mother, the grounding center of Francesca's world, moved her half a continent away... The first in her family to attend college, The Family Snitch started as a youthful experiment in journalistic investigation, as Francesca began to uncover her father's secret criminal past. But in her increasingly dogged pursuit of the truth at any cost, was she just selling everybody out? In her thought-provoking exploration, Francesca also interrogates her own relationship to the truth, finding that she trusts almost no one and refuses to believe anything that can't be backed by hard evidence. She turns to experts on memory and psychology, in search of someone to help explain the secrets kept between parents and children, and the inheritances they leave us in the fallout of their choices. She pulls on the threads that lead her back through the forms that came before this one- theater and film, Greek tragedy and myth. The result is a page-turning memoir that is also an artful work of literature with enduring appeal. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Francesca FontanaPublisher: Steerforth Press Imprint: Steerforth Press Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9781586424220ISBN 10: 158642422 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 03 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsTable of Contents 1. Where I Started 5 2. Secrets 26 3. Need to Know 45 4. The Family 59 5. USA v. Fontana 74 6. The Red Light 80 7. What Al Tells Me 86 8. INTERLUDE I — On Myth 92 9. What Kind of Man 97 10. The Fear 112 11. Going Away 118 12. The Family Snitch 124 13. Her Life Began 148 14. The Leaving 160 15. INTERLUDE II — On Discovery 166 16. The L-Word 172 17. Lies I Tell Myself 181 18. David Rose 190 19. Paths of Least Resistance 194 20. The Shame 207 21. INTERLUDE III — On Tragedy 216 22. The Trial 221 23. The Aftermath 230 24. If Your Father Says... 239 25. Collateral Damage 258 26. How Does It End 265 27. Nostalgia 279 28. INTERLUDE IV — On Cycles 288 29. She and I 294 30. The Man, The Myth 302 31. Christmas Time is Here 305 32. False Starts 307Reviews""Unflinching yet vulnerable, The Family Snitch is the riveting investigation of an elusive father, the truth behind his time in and out of prison, and the inescapable reverberations of childhood into the present. Fontana writes about herself and the people whose lives shaped hers with deep clarity and sometimes heartbreaking frankness. This book is the best kind of memoir — one that resists easy answers, choosing instead to remind us of the impossibly complex nature of humanity. — Vanessa A. Bee, author of Home Bound ""Superb! A relentless, true-crime memoir about a reporter investigating the hardest possible subject: her own outlaw father."" — PJ Vogt, journalist and host of Search Engine podcast ""A heart-rending documentation of the corrosive nature of shame and the limitations of truth. With surgical precision and scrupulous reportage, Fontana examines what love takes—in action, not intention—demanding a clear accounting of the past, and letting no one, herself included, off the hook."" —Nina St. Pierre, author of Love Is a Burning Thing ""Unflinching yet vulnerable, The Family Snitch is the riveting investigation of an elusive father, the truth behind his time in and out of prison, and the inescapable reverberations of childhood into the present. Fontana writes about herself and the people whose lives shaped hers with deep clarity and sometimes heartbreaking frankness. This book is the best kind of memoir — one that resists easy answers, choosing instead to remind us of the impossibly complex nature of humanity."" — Vanessa A. Bee, author of Home Bound ""What Francesca Fontana achieves is miraculous. She is not only an extraordinary reporter of her father’s criminal past but also of her own self—the ways she is shaped by her history and the tremendous courage it takes to break free. The Family Snitch begins as an inquiry into the possibilities, trickery, and bounds of memory, and unfolds into a devastating story of heartbreak within one family."" — Sanaë Lemoine, author of The Margot Affair ""Francesca Fontana's The Family Snitch: A Daughter's Memoir of Truth and Lies is a sharp and absorbing investigation into a father, a mother, and a self. By mapping hard facts onto the slippery and abstract, Fontana reveals the futilities of trying to pin down a lie, of attempting to measure the emotionally-outsized proportions of a parent."" — Karleigh Frisbie Brogan, author of Holding ""Superb! A relentless, true-crime memoir about a reporter investigating the hardest possible subject: her own outlaw father."" — PJ Vogt, journalist and host of Search Engine podcast ""Through incredible investigative storytelling, Francesca Fontana’s The Family Snitch: A Daughter’s Memoir of Truth and Lies is a stirring examination of truth, deception, and self. Told with precision and vulnerability, Fontana’s memoir is both moving and endlessly thought-provoking about stories that shape one’s life, and how we live with them."" —Rainesford Stauffer, author of An Ordinary Age and All the Gold Stars Author InformationFrancesca Fontana is an award-winning reporter at the Wall Street Journal. She is a graduate of the University of Oregon's Clark Honors College. In 2020, she received a Front Page Award from the Newswomen's Club of New York. She lives in Brooklyn with her cat, Jiji. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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