An Amazon Best Book of November 2015: More revealing than most memoirs, more satisfying than a diary, Mary-Louise
Parker’s Dear Mr. You is comprised of letters addressed to the men, both fictional and real, in her life. The letters,
directed at the ‘you’ are unabated marvels of experience – at times gritty and unpolished, snappy and sad, romantic and
heart pounding. There are the letters addressed to her daughter’s future boyfriend that release the snarl of a mother’s
love; a raw apology to a cab driver who was the recipient of her rage; her mentor on the cusp of dying from AIDS with
“that voice I could have poured on pancakes”; the beloved priest of her childhood answers the questions of her children;
the lover who said “you would love me until you were ashes.” These moments, congested by the form of a letter, take on a
level of unapologetic and unfettered intimacy that is intoxicating to read. Mary-Louise Parker is not just an award
winning actress. She is a gutsy, bew writer whose stories will make you swoon, induce bawdy laughter, and
puncture your deepest emotions. – Al Woodworth
Guest Review by Andrew Solomon
Andrew Solomon Photograph by Annie Leibovitz
Mary Louise Parker Photograph by Tina Turnbow
“Dear Mr. You” comes as a revelation – actually, one revelation after another. Mary-Louise Parker’s book of
memoiristic letters to some of the men in her life reads like a collection of first-rate short stories, varied in mood
and tone but united by a perspective comprising gratitude, forgiveness, courage, and humor. Parker lives intensely and
sees acutely; she has a warrior’s determination and a poet’s in. I found myself reading this mesmerizing album of
portraits like poetry, in fact: only a few letters at a sitting, the better to savor their resonances.
Parker recounts transforming episodes with some of her male heroes, among them a movement teacher, her acting mentor,
the family priest (“who believed in God and still liked him”), the no-nonsense accountant who taught her how money
works, the beekeeper next-door, and a former child soldier from Uganda. She depicts love affairs in all their
ambivalence and fluctuating passions, and commemorates her most awful romantic relationships in an epistle to Cerberus,
the mythical three-headed dog at the maw of Hell. She speculates about the hard-drinking Grandpa she never knew, and
relives the relinquishment of her her’s body after his death. He was a three-war veteran with post-traumatic stress
disorder who punched holes in the wall, and she misses him too profoundly to convey: “It would be like blue trying to
describe the ocean.”
Here is the worst imaginable encounter between a pregnant woman and a New York City cabdriver with no idea where he’s
going, here, a wishful meditation for a newborn baby boy. Here, even a note of apology to NASA “for repeatedly stating
that you were a massive misuse of tax dollars and basically an oversized playground for those who like to wear
antigravity suits.” She then admits (as men so rarely do), “I didn’t know what I was talking about.”
Parker’s recollections evoke the very nature of memory, their potent images never too fully limned, never lingering
over the emotions they incite. “Dear Mr. You” reminds us what a glorious business life can be even at its worst, if you
can tug it into the right frame of view. It makes me hope that my young son might grow up to be the sort of fellow
worthy of a letter from someone the caliber of Mary-Louise Parker. I cannot imagine anyone worth knowing who would not
fall in love with the shimmering vision at the core of this masterful book.