The Fayetteville Observer

Lara Love Hardin’s memoir is Oprah’s new book club pick

- Hillel Italie ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – Oprah Winfrey’s latest book club selection is an author and ghost writer’s life story, chroniclin­g her journey from prison and drug addiction to collaborat­ing with the Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and others.

Lara Love Hardin’s “The Many Lives of Mama Love: A Memoir of Lying, Stealing, Writing, and Healing” was published last summer.

“Once you start reading, be prepared, because you won’t want to stop as Lara chronicles how she went from surviving behind bars to becoming a best-selling ghostwrite­r and author, sharing her harrowing, sometimes hilarious, and often heartbreak­ing journey from her arrest and conviction to her release and ultimate reinventio­n,” Winfrey said in a statement Tuesday.

As she has done with previous club picks, Winfrey popped up during a video conference call between Hardin and her publisher, Simon & Schuster, and broke the news.

“I had to ask myself if this was real life or my overactive imaginatio­n,” Hardin

said in a statement. “Her spotlight is humbling and validating and I know it will also shine a light on the shared story of all incarcerat­ed women. Words are inadequate to convey what an incredible, fantastica­l, dream-fulfilling honor this is as an author, nor how much it means to me that this new plot twist to my story will become a part of the story my children someday tell to their children.”

Hardin has been cited by Winfrey before. She co-wrote, and was fully credited for the prison memoir “The Sun Does Shine,” by Anthony Ray Hinton, who spent nearly 30 years on death row in Alabama on a wrongful murder conviction. “The Sun Does Shine” was a Winfrey

selection in 2018. “The Many Lives of Mama Love” is Winfrey’s 104th book choice since she started the club in 1996, her previous selections ranging from Michelle Obama’s “Becoming” to Cormac McCarthy’s “The Road.”

Tuesday’s announceme­nt comes at a time of growing prominence for ghost writers, among them J.R. Moehringer, widely praised for his work on Prince Harry’s “Spare.” In January, the Gotham Ghostwrite­rs and the American Society of Journalist­s and Authors co-presented the first-ever national conference of ghost writers, “Gathering of the Ghosts,” in New York City.

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