High School

High School

by Sara Quin, Tegan Quin

Narrated by Sara Quin, Tegan Quin

Unabridged — 9 hours, 25 minutes

High School

High School

by Sara Quin, Tegan Quin

Narrated by Sara Quin, Tegan Quin

Unabridged — 9 hours, 25 minutes

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Overview

"Tegan and Sara Quin's joint memoir is perfect in audiobook form....Knowing and loving Tegan and Sara the musicians will obviously make this listen extra special, but it's by no means a prerequisite to entry. High School, very literally, is for everyone." -- Paste, best audiobooks of 2019

This program is read by the authors and features bonus interviews and rough recordings of Tegan and Sara's first songs, recorded on cassette tapes in the late 90s, and rediscovered 20 years later while writing
High School.

NOW AN 8-EPISODE FREEVEE TELEVISION SERIES! -- From the iconic musicians Tegan and Sara comes a memoir about high school, detailing their first loves and first songs in a compelling look back at their humble beginnings.


High School
is the revelatory and unique coming-of-age story of Sara and Tegan Quin, identical twins from Calgary, Alberta, who grew up at the height of grunge and rave culture in the nineties, well before they became the celebrated musicians and global LGBTQ icons we know today. While grappling with their identity and sexuality, often alone, they also faced academic meltdown, their parents' divorce, and the looming pressure of what might come after high school. Written in alternating chapters from both Tegan's and Sara's points of view, the book is a raw account of the drugs, alcohol, love, music, and friendship they explored in their formative years.

A transcendent story of first loves and first songs, High School captures the tangle of discordant and parallel memories of two sisters who grew up in distinct ways even as they lived just down the hall from each another. This is the origin story of Tegan and Sara.


Editorial Reviews

NOVEMBER 2019 - AudioFile

Sara and Tegan Quin narrate their own journey through the tumultuous high school years in the ‘90s before they became the celebrated musicians and LGBTQ icons they are today. Memoirs tend to be best when read by the authors, and this is no exception. Being identical twins, Tegan and Sara have similar qualities to their voices but are able to differentiate themselves with their personalities. Alternating chapters allow the authors to let their stories blend. Their high school years cover many serious issues that affected teens then and still do today, including sexuality, identity, drugs, and alcohol. Listeners will enjoy hearing rough cuts of some of Tegan and Sara’s first songs as well as an interview with the authors. A.G.M. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

07/08/2019

The Canadian musician authors focus on their high school years in this moody memoir set in the mid-1990s. The twin sisters tell their story in alternating chapters whose topics include first loves, coming out as gay, and making music. They heartbreakingly recall the girls they fell for and the discomfort that came with hiding their romantic relationships from critical adults. Even though the two bickered as teenagers (“It didn’t matter what it was; everything was a battlefield,” Sara writes), music always brought them together. Their life-changing moment came when they found their stepfather’s guitar and played it for the first time. Their descriptions of touching the guitar match up strikingly. Writes Tegan: “Its thick body pressed into my thighs... the desire to play it felt instinctive.” Adds Sara: “The weight of the wood felt intimate, touching almost all of me at once.” The sisters began composing songs and eventually entered a contest that would get them a deal with PolyGram Records. The narrative ends as they gear up to make a name for themselves as artists. This quiet memoir—which includes family photos—will appeal to fans interested in the duo’s formative years. (Sept.)

From the Publisher

"The Quins are skilled writers with an eye for detail . . . Both women deftly capture the messy complexities of being twins. [High School] has the immediacy and intimacy of a diary."
JANCEE DUNN, The Washington Post

"Elegant and evocative."
REBECCA NICOLSON, The Guardian

"Offers queer kids (and adults, heterosexual or otherwise) vital, non-didactic lessons on how to find one's voice—and how it's okay to mess up along the way."
MICHELLE HART, O, the Oprah Magazine

“Complexly intimate, smartly crafted, and packing a subtle emotional wallop . . . A quietly heroic origin story.”
—JON DOLAN, Rolling Stone

"A stirring dual account of drug use, early sexual experiences and ‘90s rave culture, their coming-of-age (and coming out) stories."
GAB GINSBERG, Billboard

"[High School] is raw and detailed, and [Tegan and Sara's] writing captures the tender vulnerability of that age with a frankness I've rarely seen before. All the eager, beautiful, and stupid passions of adolescence are rendered with an unnerving realism; the raw intensity of the material can make a reader feel implicated."
—MOIRA DONEGAN, Nylon

"[A] funny, raw, and relatable look at being a teen."
LEAH GREENBLATT, Entertainment Weekly

"Nimbly recreates that bygone era and conveys their feelings and experiences in a universally relatable way . . . honesty in their writing makes it accessible and heartfelt even if your own high school experience was quite different. Much as in their music, the Quins have a way of cutting through platitudes with an incisive combination of bluntness and raw-nerve intimacy."
ALEX McLEVY, A.V. Club

“Tegan and Sara are massively gifted songwriters, so this genius memoir shouldn’t have shocked me like it did. There’s simply nothing like it; it’s completely original, utterly gripping, and gorgeously written. High School is a fresh, beautiful, and fearlessly powerful coming-of-age memoir.”
AUGUSTEN BURROUGHS, New York Times bestselling author of Running with Scissors and Toil & Trouble

“Intense, vulnerable and life-affirming. Tegan and Sara take us back through their whirlwind journey, densely packed with the intricate complications and the envious, unspoken connection of growing up an identical twin.”
ABBI JACOBSON, author of I Might Regret This and co-creator of Broad City

“It should come as no surprise to anyone who has ever listened to a song by Tegan and Sara, that while not only are they able to convey the raw and complex emotions of the high school experience, the aimlessness of suburban life and the exhilaration of finding your way out, they also speak universal truths about intimacy between families and sisters, friends and lovers. They've captured a time and a place so perfectly, I can't exactly be sure that I wasn't there."
BUSY PHILIPPS, actress, Freaks and Geeks, Dawson’s Creek

"To navigate the experiential landscape of high school is always an emotional minefield. To have Tegan and Sara unabashedly share the perspective of young lesbians is a rare and invaluable gift. The kind of empathetic education our society is starved for.”
K.D. LANG

“This account of the pains and pleasures of dirtbag queer-girl adolescence is everything you could want from a memoir: honest and hilarious, dishy and sweet, smart and self-aware and utterly charming. What a gift to get this view of Tegan and Sara as sisters, as friends, and as artistic collaborators, as they were becoming musical icons, and—more importantly—themselves.”
CARMEN MARIA MACHADO, author of Her Body and Other Parties

“What a gift to read the coming of age story of the brilliant Tegan and Sara. High School gives us a glimpse into the struggles and triumphs of both sisters as individuals and an evolving band. Their vulnerability, honesty, and compassion bursts through, and will make countless people feel less alone. It is so important for the LGBTQ+ community to have memoirs like this in which they can recognize themselves and be inspired to follow their truth. I am endlessly grateful to Tegan and Sara for giving so much to this world.”
ELLEN PAGE, actress and producer, The Umbrella Academy

“High School embodies the singular gift of words leaping off of the page and becoming feelings, rattling around in the hearts and minds of a reader. The truth of nostalgia is that it must have multiple lenses to operate in its most flourishing form. Much like in their music, in this book, the voices of Tegan and Sara are two distinct bodies of water flowing into the same harmonious river, spilling through the echoing hallways of old high schools, through the bedrooms of first heartbreaks, through the old haunts that remind you of your own. This book is a triumph of memory, affection, and engaging writing.”
HANIF ABDURRAQIB, author of Go Ahead in the Rain: Notes to a Tribe Called Quest

“This book is the LSD-fueled, wallet-chained, Kurt Cobain–inspired handbook of how to become young, queer rock stars, written by chapter-swapping twins who I wish I had read when I was in high school. This book would have changed everything. I recommend reading it under the covers with a flashlight, and hiding it from your mother.”
IVAN COYOTE, author of Tomboy Survival Guide and Rebent Sinner

"Tegan and Sara's literary coming-of-age memoir High School is an engrossing, sharply crafted, deeply authentic look at the misery of (queer) adolescence and the gorgeous glory of becoming yourself. So much angst and revelation, depression, inebriation, inspiration, vulnerability, and power. A wild, teenage ride I could not put down."
MICHELLE TEA, author of Against Memoir

“Candid, tender, courageously honest, and heartbreakingly familiar; I could see myself and my own experience reflected in these stories, more so than in anything else I've ever read. Reading this book moved me deeply.”
JULIEN BAKER, singer and songwriter

“With their music, Tegan and Sara offer listeners a glimpse at a specific time and place. In High School, they throw the door open and allow readers the opportunity to become fully immersed in their world. Tegan and Sara’s stories of first loves, self discovery, and the insights into their relationship with each other are deeply moving and relatable. They never hold back from the absolute authenticity they are known for. I never wanted it to end.”
CLEA DUVALL, actress and director, Veep, The Intervention

“High School highlights the indisputable fact that Tegan and Sara were never just musicians—they are master storytellers. In reflecting on that torturous span of time spent agonizing over one’s body, friendships, parents, and desires, this book highlights how high school is less of a place or memory but a metaphor for uncertainty, and underlines the salvation that can only be found in music. High School foreshadows the beginning of a rich and riveting literary career.”
VIVEK SHRAYA, musician and author of I'm Afraid of Men

“This book is one of the most interesting and brave coming-of-age stories I have read in many years. Tegan and Sara reveal the confusion, the unraveling of personal truths, the fear, the excitement, the shame and the seclusion that many of us endure as we make our way through the world. This is also a book about how music saves people, how music gives us a voice and a reason to keep going.”
JANN ARDEN, singer, songwriter, and author of Feeding My Mother

“A sweet and salty coming-of-age memoir. The countless Tegan and Sara fans will love this, but it’s also for anyone who ever went to high school and nurtured dreams, schemes, joy and rage while barricaded in their bedroom. Count me in.”
ANN-MARIE MACDONALD, author of Fall On Your Knees

“Tegan and Sara have pulled back the curtain on a formative chapter in their lives and offer a gloriously dizzying, richly observed account of how they became who they are today and what inspired the music we’ve come to know and love. Funny, frank, and so very cool, High School is basically the teenage best friend I always wanted growing up.”
DAN LEVY, actor, producer, Schitt’s Creek

NOVEMBER 2019 - AudioFile

Sara and Tegan Quin narrate their own journey through the tumultuous high school years in the ‘90s before they became the celebrated musicians and LGBTQ icons they are today. Memoirs tend to be best when read by the authors, and this is no exception. Being identical twins, Tegan and Sara have similar qualities to their voices but are able to differentiate themselves with their personalities. Alternating chapters allow the authors to let their stories blend. Their high school years cover many serious issues that affected teens then and still do today, including sexuality, identity, drugs, and alcohol. Listeners will enjoy hearing rough cuts of some of Tegan and Sara’s first songs as well as an interview with the authors. A.G.M. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2019-07-15
A coming-of-age memoir about how the Canadian twin sisters became successful recording artists.

When they started high school, Tegan and Sara Quin considered themselves oddballs, outcasts, and misfits. They were big music fans—Nirvana, Green Day, the Smashing Pumpkins—but had no particular musical aspirations. Other than being identical twins, there was not much to distinguish them from other teenagers trying to navigate the awkward years—certainly nothing to suggest that they would soon become young recording stars and icons of the burgeoning LGBTQ community. These were pivotal years for the sisters, and their musical success would prove transformative. However, music almost seems like an afterthought here, as the authors proceed in alternating chapters to show how their experience was fairly typical. They did lots of drugs, got blackout drunk on occasion, went to parties that got out of control, experienced their sexual awakenings, and wrestled with their sexual identities. Both had boyfriends and girlfriends, and both struggled with the issue of whether a particular girl was her best friend or something more. They also fought a lot. The music came when they found a guitar that belonged to their stepfather and separately began writing songs and then harmonizing with each other's songs. The sisters also hid many of their experiences from each other, so it proved cathartic to write and share. "I wrote lyrics that sometimes felt too close to the bone," remembers Sara, recalling how the unraveling of her relationship with her girlfriend contributed to her songwriting surge. After arranging the song with her sister, she writes, "when we finished, I felt lighter." Their friends became fans of their music, and a self-recorded cassette helped expand that fandom. Winning a prestigious talent contest earned them studio time, and they marked their 18th birthdays by signing with one of the recording labels that had been pursuing them.

A solid memoir mostly for fans of the band.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172040719
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 09/24/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
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