Albuquerque Journal

Laura Dern and mom Diane Ladd exchange intimate stories

- BY KRYSTA FAURIA

When actor Diane Ladd was diagnosed with a lifethreat­ening illness and given six months to live, her only daughter and fellow actor, Laura Dern, set out to help Ladd rebuild her lung capacity through doctor-prescribed walks.

Inspired to turn the difficult daily chore into a “creative challenge” for her storytelle­r mother, Dern decided to record their conversati­ons and encouraged Ladd to share personal stories about anything and everything, from life in show business to intimate domestic details and even coveted family recipes.

Those conversati­ons form the basis for “Honey, Baby, Mine: A Mother and Daughter Talk Life, Death, Love (and Banana Pudding).”

Though Ladd was apparently misdiagnos­ed and ultimately overcame the sickness that doctors thought would take her, she and Dern said the honesty the pair cultivated on those walks made their relationsh­ip stronger than ever.

It’s fitting that this book would be released around Mother’s Day. “Honey, Baby, Mine” is mostly a series of heartwarmi­ng personal conversati­ons between a daughter and her sick mom. Even the hardest of hearts might shed a tear or two thanks to the ways in which this book forces the reader to consider their own relationsh­ip with their mother.

But it also dishes the occasional Hollywood gossip, even if it is in a wholesome kind of way that one familiar with Dern’s general Southern affect would expect.

As seasoned entertaine­rs, both Ladd and Dern understand the public’s obsession with pulling back the curtain on the lives of celebritie­s, an obsession this book aims to satisfy.

And while the intimate stories may seem like a vulnerable glimpse into the lives of these two women, it is difficult to discern, given their cognizance of the fact that their conversati­ons will be made public, how much of that vulnerabil­ity is genuine.

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