Full disclosure: I didn't know who the author was before I read this. Do I live under a rock for not knowing who this author is? Yes.
HOWEVER, nothing in this book alludes to the author's day job. I looked him up after I read it, merely wanting to know WHO this person is. I'm actually glad I didn't know who the author was because I likely wouldn't have picked this book up in the first place.
This is the book I had hoped The Pale-Faced Lie to be when I read it last week. Elder comes at this with a completely different tone, and I appreciated that. I liked the stories from his childhood, both the good and the bad. I came away with an appreciation of his father's strengths and some weaknesses.
To me, there are so many ways people can get crossways with loved ones - particularly when the love language you receive is far different than the one you want. Larry wants to hear words of affirmation from his father, but that's not his father's love language. It's acts of service; it's the routine and dependability in being a provider.
I enjoyed how the author approached his father with a new lens, and he got so much out of it. Perhaps this is a very oversimplified example, but I still appreciated it and feel many readers can take away something valuable from this - even if they don't agree with his politics.