Lot Six: A Memoir

Reading Level
Grade 8
Time to Read
7 hrs 31 mins

Reading Level

What is the reading level of Lot Six: A Memoir?

Analysing the books in the series, we estimate that the reading level of Lot Six: A Memoir is 7th and 8th grade.

Expert Readability Tests for
Lot Six: A Memoir

Readability Test Reading Level
Flesch Kincaid Scale Grade 7
SMOG Index Grade 9
Coleman Liau Index Grade 8
Dale Chall Readability Score Grade 5

Reading Time

7 hrs 31 mins

How long to read Lot Six: A Memoir?

The estimated word count of Lot Six: A Memoir is 112,530 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 7 hrs 31 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 12 hrs 31 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 4 hrs 11 mins.

Lot Six: A Memoir - 112,530 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 12 hrs 31 mins
Average 250 words/min 7 hrs 31 mins
Fast 450 words/min 4 hrs 11 mins
Lot Six: A Memoir by David Adjmi
Authors
David Adjmi

More about Lot Six: A Memoir

112,530 words

Word Count

for Lot Six: A Memoir

12 hours and 6 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

 In a world where everyone is inventing a self, curating a feed and performing a fantasy of life, what does it mean to be a person? With his grandly entertaining debut memoir, playwright David Adjmi explores how human beings create themselves, and how artists make their lives into art.  Brooklyn, 1970s. Born into the ruins of a Syrian Jewish family that once had it all, David is painfully displaced. Trapped in an insular religious community that excludes him and a family coming apart at the seams, he is plunged into suicidal depression by the age of eight. Through adolescence, David tries to suppress his homosexual feelings and fit in, but when pushed to the breaking point, he makes the bold decision to cut off his family, erase his past, and leave everything he knows behind. There's only one problem: who should he be? Bouncing between identities he steals from the pages of fashion magazines, tomes of philosophy, sitcoms and foreign films, and practically everyone he meets--from Rastafarians to French preppies--David begins to piece together an entirely new adult self. But is this the foundation for a life, or just a kind of quicksand?  Moving from the glamour and dysfunction of 1970s Brooklyn, to the sybaritic materialism of Reagan's 1980s to post-9/11 New York, Lot Six offers a quintessentially American tale of an outsider striving to reshape himself in the funhouse mirror of American culture. Adjmi's memoir is a genre bending Künstlerroman in the spirit of Charles Dickens and Alison Bechdel, a portrait of the artist in the throes of a life and death crisis of identity. Raw and lyrical, and written in gleaming prose that veers effortlessly between hilarity and heartbreak, Lot Six charts Adjmi's search for belonging, identity, and what it takes to be an artist in America.