· A Memoir of Privilege and Loss. By Frances Stroh. Illustrated. pp. Harper/HarperCollins Publishers. $ For more than a century, the Stroh Brewing Company was a fixture of Detroit industry Estimated Reading Time: 5 mins. · Frances Stroh, Author of "Beer Money: A Memoir of Privilege and Loss" visits Google Ann Arbor to chat about her book, in which she reveals the complexities o. · In her image-rich memoir, “Beer Money,” Frances Stroh asks the question with heroic honesty, from the inside. Having grown up as an heir to a vast fortune, she recalls driving with her father Author: Dawn Raffel.
Beer Money: A Memoir of Privilege and Loss Frances Stroh. Harper, $ (p) ISBN Buy this book. Stroh, of the Stroh brewing dynasty, captures the downfall of this empire. In her image-rich memoir, 'Beer Money,' Frances Stroh asks the question with heroic honesty, from the inside.". "With an artist's eye for visual detail her frank and engrossing memoir captures the long decline of the city of Detroit and her sadly dysfunctional family.". "A compelling story of loss, but also of the resiliency. Beer Money: A Memoir of Privilege and Loss reflects her family's rarefied social and financial résumé in an effective narrative about the shared fate of the Stroh Beer Company, Detroit's emblematic manufacturing status, and the Stroh family itself. But the economic story of Detroit and the Stroh business, while interesting, is not as.
Members of the Stroh brewery dynasty are privately seething over the just-published memoir “Beer Money: A Memoir of Privilege and Loss” by Frances Stroh. (This is a review of the Audio Edition of "Beer Money: A Memoir of Privilege and Loss" written by Frances Stroh and narrated by Erin Bennett. It is unabridged at 6 hours and 37 minutes long, and published by Blackstone Audio. I received a free copy of this audio book in exchange for my honest review. Warning: a few spoilers!). Stroh stitches together her and her family’s stories in a series of verbal snapshots. Stroh’s compelling memoir vividly portrays the aching permanence of loss and the palpability of hope that accompanies starting over.” -- Publishers Weekly “Beer Money is one of those memoirs you neither put down nor forget. I’ll remember Frances Stroh’s family―and the beautifully candid, honest and often unforgettable voice she uses to describe them―for a long time.
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