By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Entertainment MagazineEntertainment Magazine
  • Home
  • NewsLive
  • Celebrity
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
Search
Women
  • Beauty
  • Health
  • Food
Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Fitness
  • Culture
World
  • United States
  • Europe
  • Asia
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
© 2022 All Rights Reserved – Entertainment Magazine.
Reading: Book Review: ‘The Farewell Tour,’ by Stephanie Clifford
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Latest News
Ezra Miller’s ‘The Flash’ Already Has Sequel Written Before Release
June 4, 2023
Shocking TV Exits
June 4, 2023
RHOC’s Gina Kirschenheiter, Travis Mullen’s Relationship Timeline
June 4, 2023
See Landon Barker’s Tattoo Tribute to Girlfriend Charli D’Amelio
June 4, 2023
‘Maestra’ Shows the Power of Women on the Concert Podium
June 4, 2023
Aa
Entertainment MagazineEntertainment Magazine
Aa
  • Home
  • News
  • Celebrity
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Culture
  • Fashion
  • Beauty
  • Food
  • Travel
Search
  • News
  • Celebrity
  • Bookmarks
  • Sections
    • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Beauty
    • Culture
    • Fashion
Follow US
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
© 2022 All Rights Reserved – Entertainment Magazine.
Entertainment Magazine > Culture > Book Review: ‘The Farewell Tour,’ by Stephanie Clifford
Culture

Book Review: ‘The Farewell Tour,’ by Stephanie Clifford

Press Room
Press Room March 5, 2023
Updated 2023/03/05 at 3:03 AM
Share
3 Min Read
SHARE

An account of Water Lil’s early shows reads like a found poem: “We played the Hidy-Hody Ranch Bar, and the Circle-M Saloon, the Round-Up Rodeo and the Boiler Room, the Gunshot Lounge and Gunshot Bar and Gunshot Club.” When she checks in with her manager Coy Roy via pay phone, he reminds her to sing about topics like “lost love,” which put her in a sympathetic light. “That meant: no songs about the road, about ambition, about men I tumbled into hotel beds with when I was drunk enough.”

Even as her tour stops leap off the page, Water Lil herself remains a cipher. Perhaps this is inevitable — she has spent her life dressing up in costumes and writing songs about a false persona, one created for commercial appeal and stripped of agency and messy desires. But something breaks loose when she visits Tule Lake, Calif., where the parents of Lillian’s Japanese American fiddle player, Kaori, were interned during World War II. When Kaori asks why Lillian didn’t do anything to protest the internment camps, she responds, “I didn’t know what to do.” And thinks: “I didn’t have a good answer for her. My generation didn’t protest like hers did, but I wasn’t sure if it was because we weren’t aware that we could, or because we were scared to risk what we had, or we — I — just didn’t care enough to get involved.”

In the final pages of the novel, Lillian dares to acknowledge that her beloved West is an imperfect place: “It has been flawed since Juan Pérez and Charles William Barkley thought it needed to be discovered. Since Vancouver and Gray sailed in, and Lewis and Clark came overland and started naming things in their own language, after their own people.” And so on, all the way to Kaori’s parents’ internment, to the stories of “all-Black regiments and redlined neighborhoods.”

With only two shows left, Water Lil begins to find her purpose: “I could brush the snow from the crevasses, and show how we, imperfect, broken, lost, gone, silenced, were always part of the story.” Water Lil may be saying farewell, but after she performs the song she has written about her own life, she has an epiphany: “And then I knew where I would go, what I would do. For in the end, I had sung my song.”

You Might Also Like

‘Maestra’ Shows the Power of Women on the Concert Podium

Stan Lee, a Comic Book Presence On and Off Screen

Filmmakers Sometimes Take a Years-Long Approach to Documentaries

10 Movies That Capture the Essence of New York

‘The Idol’: The Weeknd, Sam Levinson and Lily Rose-Depp on Their Graphic Pop Drama

Press Room March 5, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook TwitterEmail Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article Joaquin Phoenix Runs Through Streets of DTLA During ‘Joker 2’ Shoot
Next Article The 12 Best Women's Workout Shorts for Every Type of Activity
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Latest News

Ezra Miller’s ‘The Flash’ Already Has Sequel Written Before Release
News June 4, 2023
Shocking TV Exits
Entertainment June 4, 2023
RHOC’s Gina Kirschenheiter, Travis Mullen’s Relationship Timeline
Celebrity June 4, 2023
See Landon Barker’s Tattoo Tribute to Girlfriend Charli D’Amelio
News June 4, 2023

You Might also Like

Culture

‘Maestra’ Shows the Power of Women on the Concert Podium

June 4, 2023
Culture

Stan Lee, a Comic Book Presence On and Off Screen

June 4, 2023
Culture

Filmmakers Sometimes Take a Years-Long Approach to Documentaries

June 3, 2023
Culture

10 Movies That Capture the Essence of New York

June 3, 2023
Entertainment MagazineEntertainment Magazine

© 2022 All Rights Reserved – Entertainment Magazine.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?