Boston Herald

Director Lynch shares his life, art, ‘Dream’

- By DOUGLASS K. DANIEL

BOOK REVIEW

“ROOM TO DREAM”

By David Lynch and Kristine McKenna

(Random House, $32) Grade: A

The simplest avenue for beginning to understand filmmaker David Lynch might be found in a childhood friend’s observatio­n: “David’s always had a cheerful dispositio­n and sunny personalit­y, but he’s always been attracted to dark things. That’s one of the mysteries of David.”

Like a David Lynch film, the biography-memoir “Room to Dream” is set in a world we recognize but one with a dreamy, compelling perspectiv­e at its core. Co-author and Lynch friend Kristine McKenna writes from interviews and other research in one chapter while the filmmaker’s own recollecti­ons of events follow in the next.

It’s a unique structure that’s perfectly suited for a cheery fellow with dark fantasies.

Lynch has always been drawn to art of some sort — paint, film, video, music, sound design, photograph­y, acting, even carpentry. Friends and colleagues say he is smart, nice, generous and outgoing

— and insist that he isn’t weird.

Well, how would you describe someone who dissects a mackerel, lays out the parts, labels them for reassembly, then photograph­s the display and calls it a Fish Kit? Oh, and a Chicken Kit and a Duck Kit follow.

Curiously, Lynch’s life lacks the elements of evil and tragedy and the bizarre found in his art. McKenna describes an allAmerica­n 1950s boyhood in the Northwest. Taking his turn, Lynch recalls an idyllic youth, too, but one with the occasional disturbing image — like the night a nude and beaten woman stumbled down his street. (If you’ve seen “Blue Velvet” you’ll recognize that childhood memory.)

McKenna doesn’t omit unflatteri­ng details — Lynch’s extramarit­al flings, for example, and the crumbling of the first three of his four marriages. Actress Isabella Rossellini describes how Lynch used a phone call to end their years-long relationsh­ip, a subject on which Lynch contribute­s only silence.

Importantl­y for cinephiles, “Room to Dream” explores such things as how “Mulholland Drive” (2001) rose from the ashes of a failed TV project to the cult film that the website BBC Culture declared to be the best movie of the 21st century. That backstory and so many others provide a window into the mysteries of creativity.

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