cover image Lips Unsealed: A Memoir

Lips Unsealed: A Memoir

Belinda Carlisle. Crown, $27 (265pp) ISBN 978-0-307-46349-4

The Go-Go’s lead singer who went on to a solo career recounts a remarkable early Cinderella story that morphs into a frank, though at times self-indulgent, story of drug abuse and failure. Hailing from a working-class section of Los Angeles, the eldest daughter of divorced parents, Carlisle struggled early on with shame over her mother’s depression and her step-father’s drinking problem; teased for her chubbiness, she sought escape from a difficult home and found it in the mid-’70s’ burgeoning L.A. punk scene. Steeped in the brash music of Iggy Pop and Queen, crazy about the iconoclastic new look, she and her friends haunted Hollywood clubs while she worked as a hairdresser and secretary. In 1978 she, Jane Wiedlin, and Margot Olaverra came up with the idea of starting their own band, eventually adding Charlotte Caffey and Gina Shock, and within a short time the all-girl Go-Go’s had moved from being a novelty to a super-cool pop band with their dance hit, “We Got the Beat.” Alongside dizzying stardom came the requisite drug-and-alcohol frenzy, and much of this memoir is a chronicle of one party after another and a list of celebrity who’s who. Carlisle writes candidly, and her chronic fear of being exposed as a “fake” is heartfelt and winning. (June)