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  • Published: 18 October 2018
  • ISBN: 9780385685672
  • Imprint: Doubleday CAN Titles
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $39.99

Beautiful Scars

Steeltown Secrets, Mohawk Skywalkers and the Road Home




"Bunny told me there were secrets about me that she would take to the grave, secrets that no one would ever hear, including me . . ."

Tom Wilson always felt something wasn't quite right. His parents, Bunny and George, were much older than other kids' parents. There were no baby photos of him in the house. At school, classmates called him Indian, despite his parents' Irish-Quebecois background. And as he got older, friends, lovers and even family members remarked on his uncanny resemblance to Bunny's closest relative, her niece Janie Lazare, whose father was a Mohawk from Kahnawake, Quebec.

Tom wouldn't learn the truth about his identity until he was fifty-three, when a tour handler whose mother had known Tom's now deceased parents let it slip that he was adopted. It would be another two years until he worked up the courage to confront Janie with what the handler had told him, what all his life he had suspected. Janie--the woman whom Tom called cousin, whom he'd known his whole life, who had lived with Tom and Bunny after George died--immediately broke into tears and confessed. She was his biological mother.

In this incredible story about family and identity, carefully guarded secrets and profound acts of forgiveness, Tom Wilson writes about growing up as an outsider in two families--the family he lost, and the family who took him in. His story takes us from working-class Hamilton of the 1960s and '70s, neighbourhoods peopled by WWII vets, factory workers and fall-guy wrestlers, to today, as he continues his journey to connect with the man he now knows to be his father and with his Mohawk heritage and relatives, discovering Kahnawake chiefs and Brooklyn "skywalkers" among them.

With a rare gift for storytelling and a remarkable story to tell, Tom Wilson writes with unflinching honesty and extraordinary compassion about his search for the truth. It's a story about scars, about the ones that hurt us, and the ones that make us who we are.

  • Published: 18 October 2018
  • ISBN: 9780385685672
  • Imprint: Doubleday CAN Titles
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $39.99

About the author

Tom Wilson

TOM WILSON is a three-time Juno-winning Canadian musician with multiple gold records. He has written for and recorded songs with Sarah McLachlan, City and Colour, Jason Isbell, Colin James, Lucinda Williams, Billy Ray Cyrus, Mavis Staples and The Rankin Family. His art has been shown in galleries in New York City, Vancouver, Toronto and more recently, Ottawa. His first book, Beautiful Scars, was a national bestseller. Tom lives in Hamilton.

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Praise for Beautiful Scars

Praise for Beautiful Scars:

  • "This is not your typical recollection of a debauched life of sex, drugs and rock 'n roll. . . . The storytelling ability present in Wilson's songwriting translates to the written page with real ease. He has a direct cut-to-the-chase style, but is still capable of delivering poetic imagery. . . . This [is] an inspiring read." --Toronto Star
  • "Beautiful Scars is a frank and fair, raw and loving look at what it means to grow up with the silver spoon as far from your mouth as it can get, a confession that celebrates the miseries and joys of working-class life, of musicianship, of chasing secrets, of fighting through to discover the person you didn't realize you were. This is a remarkable, generous, big-hearted book." --Guy Vanderhaeghe, author of The Englishman's Boy, The Last Crossing and A Good Man
  • "The book isn't just good. It's stunning. . . . The secrets around [Wilson's] life form a fundamentally Canadian story, rich in history and steeped in darkness. They also separate Beautiful Scars from the ranks of the typical rock memoir, and place it firmly on the shelf with the likes of Angela's Ashes and The Glass Castle--riveting accounts of family and secrets, poverty and peril, adversity and triumph." --Quill & Quire, starred review