Home Baked: My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco

Author:   Alia Volz
Publisher:   Mariner Books
ISBN:  

9780358505020


Pages:   448
Publication Date:   20 April 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Home Baked: My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco


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Author:   Alia Volz
Publisher:   Mariner Books
Imprint:   Mariner Books
Dimensions:   Width: 13.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 20.10cm
Weight:   0.354kg
ISBN:  

9780358505020


ISBN 10:   035850502
Pages:   448
Publication Date:   20 April 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Winner of the California Bookseller Association's Golden Poppy Award for Nonfiction Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography One of Entertainment Weekly's Books to Read in April One of Lambda Literary's Most Anticipated LGBTQ Books of April 2020 One of Reader's Digest's Best Reads From the 2020 Quarantine Book Club One of She Reads' Most Anticipated Memoirs of 2020 One of Alma's Favorite Books for Spring 2020 Included on 7x7's Spring Reading List: Books by Bay Area Authors The subtitle, 'My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco' tells you much of what you need to know in terms of content. But as a portrait of a heroics, innovation, grit, and pot-baking in an epidemic (in this case, the AIDS crisis), it's also strikingly relevant. And beautifully written, too. --Entertainment Weekly, Books to Read in April A beautiful evocation of the Bay Area in the years before tech bros and big money changed the city...Like Stefan Zweig's The World of Yesterday, this is a narrative about a time that is now gone: San Francisco as circus, where pot was both ubiquitous and as illegal as heroin. Under Volz's careful attention, all of it--the era, the place, and her own parents--is rendered clear, bright, and beautiful. --Paris Review, Staff Pick An earnest yet comic memoir by the daughter of the owner of the Sticky Fingers bakery, purveyor of pot brownies and crusader for legalization. --New York Times, New and Noteworthy Audiobooks A raunchy and rollicking account of a vanished era told by someone who paid very close attention to her larger-than-life parents. I gobbled it up like an edible. --Armistead Maupin I devoured this book! Sex, drugs, rock-n-roll, a savvy business woman, a social and medicinal revolution: What's not to love? This is a story Alia Volz was born to tell. --Rebecca Skloot, bestselling author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks [A] nostalgic, thoroughly entertaining new romp of a memoir...[An] intensely personal portrait of an unconventional childhood, as well as a rigorously reported account of a kaleidoscopic time in San Francisco history, an era of exuberant highs and pitch-black lows. --San Francisco Chronicle While a memoir, Home Baked is also an intensively researched book on San Francisco and the burgeoning cannabis culture surrounding Sticky Fingers Brownies, based on archival research and hundreds of hours of interviews with LGBT activists, cannabis advocates and, of course, Volz's parents. Home Baked also provides a timely contrast with both modern San Francisco and the blossoming cannabis industry, which can now offer safe and legal access to the drug, although significant reforms to the war on drugs have not materialized. --Newsweek Ample, skillfully researched, and cleanly narrated, Volz's debut is really five books in one . . . Alia in tow, Mer and her peers travel among San Francisco, Humboldt County and Marin, connecting an essentially agricultural project to an urban counterculture; they also weave together less and more responsible ways to raise a kid, almost as Volz herself weaves together her archives of the post-hippie-era Bay Area with her own vivid memories. --Literary Hub A coming-of-age memoir like no other. --Shelf Awareness, Starred Review Proves sometimes truth is stranger than fiction...[This] heartwarming, sharply witty book details the author's life as the daughter of an underground baker who mixed up thousands of brownies infused with medical marijuana for AIDS patients in mid-80s San Francisco. It's a touching story of eccentric families and the unusual bonds that bring people together. --Reader's Digest, The Best 14 Reads From the 2020 Quarantine Book Club Weaving together oral history, archival research, and her own personal memories, Volz uncovers the connections Sticky Fingers had to a wide range of historical events from the assassination of Harvey Milk to the Jonestown Massacre and the AIDS crisis. Through her examination of Sticky Fingers and the circles it operated in, Volz masterfully documents the history of San Francisco's LGBTQ+ and artist community in the 1970s and '80s. --Electric Literature Volz has written a refreshing kind of family memoir -- one that presents the messier truths of her family's life without pushing to create martyrs and villains...Home Baked will envelope you in its warm, generous heart. --Chapter 16 A spirited, rollicking ride full of the vibrant characters, neighborhoods and rebel 'outsider' sensibilities that make [San Francisco] so special...[Volz is] wise enough to understand that the city will always be magic. --San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco: the eternal book subject In Home Baked, Alia Volz manages not only to write about her parents with clear-eyed compassion and empathy, she also gives us a rich history of San Francisco in the 1970s and 1980s. As I read, her family and the city came alive for me: every person and street were vivid, complicated, tragic, and beautiful. I loved this engrossing, informative, funny, and heartbreaking book. Volz is a true talent. --Edan Lepucki, bestselling author of Woman No. 17, California, and others A hilarious, heartfelt, and unforgettable debut. I gobbled it up like a pan of fresh-baked brownies. Having come of age in the Bay Area when the Sticky Fingers operation was at its height, I devoured every last morsel of this evocative and occasionally heartbreaking tale, which is as much a deep dive into San Francisco's weird and fast-evolving weed scene as it is about Volz's unforgettable family. 'Eat it, baby!' was the bakery's motto: for Alia's wonderful book, I say 'Read it, baby!' --Julia Flynn Siler, bestselling author of The White Devil's Daughters, The House of Mondavi and others Home Baked is a deeply touching, funny, wise, and magical book. By telling her eye-popping family story and transporting her readers back to the kaleidoscope days of Northern California in the last quarter of the 20th Century, Alia Volz gives us not only an indelible memoir but also an intimate social history of the mom and pop marijuana business and how it revolutionized the world. With Home Baked, Volz joins the colorful parade of writers who have brought 'San Francisco Values' fully to life, including Hunter S. Thompson, Armistead Maupin, Warren Hinckle, Diane di Prima, Richard Brautigan, Maxine Hong Kingston, Dave Eggers and Michelle Tea. --David Talbot, bestselling author of Season of the Witch and The Devil's Chessboard Home Baked hit me with the joy and sting of recognition. Here is a heroine I understand: a bad-ass mom doing legitimate yet illegal work that provided for her daughter, but also shaped a community. This wonderfully written memoir delivers a world of risk and drugs and secrecy alongside heavy batches of love and wit and courage. Alia Volz deftly blends in social context with her coming-of-age story, concocting a fantastic history lesson on everything from marijuana laws to the AIDS crisis to the transformation of San Francisco, where she herself was home-baked. I loved this book, got high off its intoxicating allure; long after I read the last page, I couldn't come down. --Bridgett M. Davis, author of The World According To Fannie Davis Alia Volz vividly portrays [San Francisco] in her delightful, heartfelt nonfiction debut...Home Baked is part memoir, part ethnography, part lively history of a beloved city that Volz chronicles with tenderness and verve. --Jenny Shank, High Country News The unheralded story of San Francisco's trailblazing 'Brownie Lady' plays out across more than 20 tumultuous years of the city's often tragic history...[Volz] combines a journalist's eye for detail with a storyteller's sense of humanity to chronicle all the incredible highs and lows, both public and private...The author's firsthand depiction of AIDS and its devastating initial impact on San Francisco's residents rings with epic tragedy. Thankfully, there are plenty of triumphs in the Sticky Fingers saga as well, and Volz herself embodies just one of them. A sometimes-sad yet stirring love letter to San Francisco filled with profundity and pride. --Kirkus Reviews Volz had been a part of her mother's special marijuana-brownie business for as long as she could remember...From the turbulent '70s through the ravages of the AIDS crisis (during which Mer and Alia distributed marijuana to AIDS patients), Volz recounts her mother's exploits with admiration, along the way tracing how attitudes about cannabis have shifted toward more acceptance. --Booklist Alia Volz was raised by parents who made their living selling weed. Her mother, Meridy, was the heart behind Sticky Fingers -- an illegal Bay Area brownie operation that for decades brought joy and vital medicine to patients, especially those suffering from AIDS, at a time when all other shoulders were turned away. When we talk about medical marijuana, we're talking about the legacy of people like Meridy Volz, who[m] Alia beautifully captures in her memoir of a most strange upbringing. --Bloom & Oil San Francisco native Alia Volz has a helluva story to tell...[Home Baked] tells the story of the author's family's rewarding sideline during the 1970s and '80s, delivering roughly 10,000 cannabis-powered brownies a month--Sticky Fingers Brownies, for those who might remember--to customers around the Bay Area, including those suffering through the early days of the AIDS crisis. --Good Times, New Titles from NorCal Authors for Your Reading List The prologue of Home Baked starts with Alia Volz writing about her elementary school participating in D.A.R.E., an anti-drug program started by Nancy Reagan. But, Volz writes, 'We were the people the cop warned my class about.' So sets the stage for her memoir, which tells about how her mom operated Sticky Fingers Brownies -- a marijuana edibles business -- out of their San Francisco home...Read if you're into: Jewish moms! Weed! San Francisco! Memoirs! Home Baked has it all. --Alma, Favorite Books for Spring 2020 Home Baked is a version of a bootstrap story so unusual and crazy-cool it's hard to look away from, let alone put down...What a coming of age story--in the personal, but also in the larger sense of an era in San Francisco fueled by music, dancing, and being high that evolves into the City Hall murders and the devastation of AIDS. Home Baked kept me up late reading from start to finish. --Sheryl Cotleur, Copperfield's Books Home Baked is an exhilarating, kaleidoscopic book that--with exceptional writerly skill--captures an era of San Francisco history that impacted the entirety of the United States, both culturally and politically, in the latter decades of the 20th century...[It's] a beautiful read that narrates an important story and introduces Alia Volz as a writer of extraordinary talent. --Paul Yamazaki, City Lights Bookstore


One of Entertainment Weekly's Books to Read in April One of Lambda Literary's Most Anticipated LGBTQ Books of April 2020 One of Reader's Digest's Best Reads From the 2020 Quarantine Book Club One of She Reads's Most Anticipated Memoirs of 2020 One of Hey Alma's Favorite Books for Spring 2020 Included on 7x7's Spring Reading List: Books by Bay Area Authors The subtitle, 'My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco' tells you much of what you need to know in terms of content. But as a portrait of a heroics, innovation, grit, and pot-baking in an epidemic (in this case, the AIDS crisis), it's also strikingly relevant. And beautifully written, too. --Entertainment Weekly, Books to Read in April A beautiful evocation of the Bay Area in the years before tech bros and big money changed the city . . . Like Stefan Zweig's The World of Yesterday, this is a narrative about a time that is now gone: San Francisco as circus, where pot was both ubiquitous and as illegal as heroin. Under Volz's careful attention, all of it--the era, the place, and her own parents--is rendered clear, bright, and beautiful. --Paris Review, Staff Pick An earnest yet comic memoir by the daughter of the owner of the Sticky Fingers bakery, purveyor of pot brownies, and crusader for legalization. --New York Times, New and Noteworthy Audiobooks I devoured this book! Sex, drugs, rock-'n'-roll, a savvy businesswoman, a social and medicinal revolution--what's not to love? This is a story Alia Volz was born to tell. --Rebecca Skloot, best-selling author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks [A] nostalgic, thoroughly entertaining new romp of a memoir . . . [An] intensely personal portrait of an unconventional childhood, as well as a rigorously reported account of a kaleidoscopic time in San Francisco history, an era of exuberant highs and pitch-black lows. --San Francisco Chronicle Proves sometimes truth is stranger than fiction . . . [This] heartwarming, sharply witty book details the author's life as the daughter of an underground baker who mixed up thousands of brownies infused with medical marijuana for AIDS patients in mid-'80s San Francisco. It's a touching story of eccentric families and the unusual bonds that bring people together. --Reader's Digest, The Best 14 Reads From the 2020 Quarantine Book Club Weaving together oral history, archival research, and her own personal memories, Volz uncovers the connections Sticky Fingers had to a wide range of historical events from the assassination of Harvey Milk to the Jonestown Massacre and the AIDS crisis. Through her examination of Sticky Fingers and the circles it operated in, Volz masterfully documents the history of San Francisco's LGBTQ+ and artist community in the 1970s and '80s. --Electric Literature Volz has written a refreshing kind of family memoir--one that presents the messier truths of her family's life without pushing to create martyrs and villains . . . Home Baked will envelope you in its warm, generous heart. --Chapter 16.org In Home Baked, Alia Volz manages not only to write about her parents with clear-eyed compassion and empathy, she also gives us a rich history of San Francisco in the 1970s and 1980s. As I read, her family and the city came alive for me: every person and street were vivid, complicated, tragic, and beautiful. I loved this engrossing, informative, funny, and heartbreaking book. Volz is a true talent. --Edan Lepucki, best-selling author of Woman No. 17, California, and others A hilarious, heartfelt, and unforgettable debut. I gobbled it up like a pan of fresh-baked brownies. Having come of age in the Bay Area when the Sticky Fingers operation was at its height, I devoured every last morsel of this evocative and occasionally heartbreaking tale, which is as much a deep dive into San Francisco's weird and fast-evolving weed scene as it is about Volz's unforgettable family. 'Eat it, baby!' was the bakery's motto; for Alia's wonderful book, I say 'Read it, baby!' --Julia Flynn Siler, best-selling author of The White Devil's Daughters, The House of Mondavi, and others Home Baked is a deeply touching, funny, wise, and magical book. By telling her eye-popping family story and transporting her readers back to the kaleidoscope days of Northern California in the last quarter of the 20th century, Alia Volz gives us not only an indelible memoir but also an intimate social history of the mom and pop marijuana business and how it revolutionized the world. With Home Baked, Volz joins the colorful parade of writers who have brought 'San Francisco Values' fully to life, including Hunter S. Thompson, Armistead Maupin, Warren Hinckle, Diane di Prima, Richard Brautigan, Maxine Hong Kingston, Dave Eggers and Michelle Tea. --David Talbot, best-selling author of Season of the Witch and The Devil's Chessboard Home Baked hit me with the joy and sting of recognition. Here is a heroine I understand: a bad-ass mom doing legitimate yet illegal work that provided for her daughter, but also shaped a community. This wonderfully written memoir delivers a world of risk and drugs and secrecy alongside heavy batches of love and wit and courage. Alia Volz deftly blends in social context with her coming-of-age story, concocting a fantastic history lesson on everything from marijuana laws to the AIDS crisis to the transformation of San Francisco, where she herself was home-baked. I loved this book, got high off its intoxicating allure; long after I read the last page, I couldn't come down. --Bridgett M. Davis, author of The World According To Fannie Davis The unheralded story of San Francisco's trailblazing 'Brownie Lady' plays out across more than twenty tumultuous years of the city's often tragic history . . . [Volz] combines a journalist's eye for detail with a storyteller's sense of humanity to chronicle all the incredible highs and lows, both public and private . . . The author's firsthand depiction of AIDS and its devastating initial impact on San Francisco's residents rings with epic tragedy. Thankfully, there are plenty of triumphs in the Sticky Fingers saga as well, and Volz herself embodies just one of them. A sometimes-sad yet stirring love letter to San Francisco filled with profundity and pride. --Kirkus Reviews Volz had been a part of her mother's special marijuana-brownie business for as long as she could remember . . . From the turbulent '70s through the ravages of the AIDS crisis (during which Mer and Alia distributed marijuana to AIDS patients), Volz recounts her mother's exploits with admiration, along the way tracing how attitudes about cannabis have shifted toward more acceptance. --Booklist San Francisco native Alia Volz has a helluva story to tell . . . [Home Baked] tells the story of the author's family's rewarding sideline during the 1970s and '80s, delivering roughly ten thousand cannabis-powered brownies a month--Sticky Fingers Brownies, for those who might remember--to customers around the Bay Area, including those suffering through the early days of the AIDS crisis. --Good Times, New Titles from NorCal Authors for Your Reading List The prologue of Home Baked starts with Alia Volz writing about her elementary school participating in D.A.R.E., an anti-drug program started by Nancy Reagan. But, Volz writes, 'We were the people the cop warned my class about.' So sets the stage for her memoir, which tells about how her mom operated Sticky Fingers Brownies--a marijuana edibles business--out of their San Francisco home . . . Read if you're into: Jewish moms! Weed! San Francisco! Memoirs! Home Baked has it all. --Hey Alma, Favorite Books for Spring 2020 Home Baked is a version of a bootstrap story so unusual and crazy-cool it's hard to look away from, let alone put down . . . What a coming of age story--in the personal, but also in the larger sense of an era in San Francisco fueled by music, dancing, and being high that evolves into the City Hall murders and the devastation of AIDS. Home Baked kept me up late reading from start to finish. --Sheryl Cotleur, Copperfield's Books Home Baked is an exhilarating, kaleidoscopic book that--with exceptional writerly skill--captures an era of San Francisco history that impacted the entirety of the United States, both culturally and politically, in the latter decades of the 20th century . . . [It's] a beautiful read that narrates an important story and introduces Alia Volz as a writer of extraordinary talent. --Paul Yamazaki, City Lights Bookstore


Author Information

Alia Volz is the author of Home Baked: My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco, winner of the 2020 Golden Poppy Award for nonfiction from the California Independent Booksellers Alliance. Her work has appeared in The Best American Essays, The New York Times, Bon Appetit, Guernica, The Best Women's Travel Writing, and many other publications. She's received fellowships from MacDowell and Ucross. Her family story has been featured on Snap Judgment, Criminal and NPR's Fresh Air.

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