other titles...

Earth to Moon

Moon Unit Zappa

Earth to Moon

White Rabbit
  • Limited *Signed* Hardback book

    Released: 12th Sep 2024

    £22.00
    Buy
  • Standard Unsigned Hardback book

    Released: 12th Sep 2024

    £22.00
    Buy

No matter how eccentric your parents were, we reckon Moon Unit probably has them beat.

This memoir handles a profoundly challenging upbringing with dignity, though it’s clear that the echoes of Frank’s less than perfect parenting still resonate today.

A wildly creative, honest and funny account of an LA childhood growing up as the first daughter in the wildly unconventional and dysfunctional Zappa family. The saying goes that "God only gives you what you can handle." Well God didn't grow up in my atheist, Wiccan, fame-laden, oversexed, teetotalling, drug-free, cloistered, chaotic, non-communicative, workaholic, feral-feeling house.' For Moon Unit, daughter of musician Frank Zappa and his 'manager', Gail, processing a life so unique, so punctuated by the whims of creative urges, the tastes of popular cultureand the calculus of celebrity, has at times been eviscerating. But it is her deep sense ofhumour and unshakeable humility that keeps her - and this memoir - pinned to the ground.

A child-star at age 14 after her accidental international hit single (recorded with her father), 'Valley Girl', turned her into a reluctant celebrity, Moon Unit Zappa's life has been utterly extraordinary from her birth in 1967 into a family that was already blessed/cursed as music royalty thanks to the acknowledged genius of Frank. But what are the consequences of growing up in a family who spend most of their time naked arguing about sexual/extra-marital liaisons and practising white magic in a free-for-all state of nonconformist, virtuoso abandon? Earth to Moon is a reckoning with self-esteem, the ghosts of the past and a mother and a father who, in the process of leaving their mark upon on the world, scarred their first daughter on home soil. Brutally self-deprecating and funny as hell, it belies a rose-tinted perspective on the 70s and 80s west coast American scene, from within the belly of the beast of the rock and roll world.

“Having lived within [his] shadow for so long, she emerges to claim her own narrative at last. And what a narrative it is.” - Guardian