Skip to content

3 Local Memoirists Explore Devastating Personal Histories

True Stories by Jason Schmidt, Litsa Dremousis and Kyle Boelte make excellent reads

By Seattle Mag January 20, 2015

memoircollagejpg

This article originally appeared in the February 2015 issue of Seattle magazine.

A List of Things That Didn’t Kill Me
by Jason Schmidt (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, January 2015)

From the opening line of the prologue, which grabs you by the hair and drags you into a blood-spattered home, this coming-of-age memoir is a page-turner. Schmidt recounts a harrowing 1970s and ’80s youth spent in Eugene and Seattle under the “care” of his highly unstable, HIV-positive father (and his father’s drug-dealing friends). Emotionally, the story is rough going, but Schmidt keeps his wits (and wit) about him, calling out ironies amid the horror.

 

Altitude Sickness
by Litsa Dremousis (Instant Future Books, October 2014)

This Seattle-based essayist has gained acclaim for her searingly honest (and bitingly funny) prose. In her first book, she takes a clear-eyed look at the story of her sometime lover, a fearless mountain climber who survived being mauled by a grizzly bear, but later fell to his death while summiting a peak in the North Cascades. As part of this recollection, which pulses with grief, anger and what-ifs, she questions the wisdom of climbing—as well as the phrase “He died doing what he loved.”

 

The Beautiful Unseen: Variations on Fog and Forgetting
by Kyle Boelte (Soft Skull Press, February 2015)

This debut memoir from a writer who recently relocated from San Francisco to Vashon Island blends poetic imagery with geographic history, meteorology and memory excavation. The author attempts to revive the fading image of his older brother, who hung himself in the family home when Boelte was 13 years old. With lovely, meditative prose, he explores how memories can be stubbornly obscured until suddenly, a long-ago moment reappears, as if a fog has lifted. Reading at Elliott Bay Books, 2/19, 7 p.m.

 

Follow Us

A New Year of Influence

A New Year of Influence

Seattle magazine’s Most Influential list kicks off 2026 with leaders across the city.

New year, new issue! As we kick off 2026, Seattle magazine is proud to present this year’s cohort of the Most Influential list, which showcases local leaders in politics, philanthropy, arts, hospitality, and business. Determined, creative, empathetic, humble, and bold are just a few of the words you’ll see describing them—each one has achieved great…

The Queen of the Seattle World’s Fair

The Queen of the Seattle World’s Fair

With a fur coat and gold Cadillac, Gracie Hansen struck a figure. Her business savvy and whip-smart humor made her a star.

In 1960, a group of well-attired men from the Seattle World’s Fair planning committee gathered in a downtown office. With the fair only two years away, people were starting to pitch their business ideas and on this day, some lady wanted to meet with them to do the same. At the scheduled time, the door…

Cookies From Home

Cookies From Home

Seattle author Kat Lieu introduces a first-of-its-kind cookbook centered on Asian cookies.

Kat Lieu has built a career out of baking, storytelling, and standing up for what she believes in. A former doctor of physical therapy turned bestselling cookbook author, she’s based in Seattle, is the founder of the online community Subtle Asian Baking and is the author of Modern Asian Baking at Home, a book that…

Photo Essay: The Relief of the Moment

Photo Essay: The Relief of the Moment

Words and photography by Nick Ward.

Photography tricks my ADHD brain into doing something borderline miraculous: It allows me to focus on exactly one thing at a time. When I press the shutter and hear that lovely little ka-chunk, the inner chatter winks out. I feel oddly connected to the moment by being outside it, observing through the frame instead of…