From Amazon.com
If you thought
Frank McCourt's childhood memories were bad, wait till you read Tonya Flynt-Vega's.
Hustled: My Journey from Fear to Faith is a cautionary tale about the power of pornography as well as a memoir about growing up with
Hustler publisher Larry Flynt for a dad. Needless to say, it's not a pretty story. But from the sensational, tragic details of Larry Flynt's bestiality, mental illness, incestuous molestation, and sexual addictions, Tonya Flynt-Vega manages to construct an autobiography whose literary deficiencies are mostly redeemed by her spiritual strength: in the end, Flynt-Vega overcame her earthly father's sexual and emotional abuse by discovering her heavenly Father's paternal love. And if Flynt-Vega's argument that pornography is inherently evil fails to persuade, her testimony of its potential to erode trust within families and to warp intimacy between lovers still comes close to being heartbreaking.
--Michael Joseph Gross
From Publishers Weekly
Continuing her very public campaign against her father, Larry Flynt, the publisher of Hustler and other pornographic magazines, Flynt-Vega puts into print what she has been saying for years: that her father's pornography empire "may be the greatest menace in America today" and that he robbed his own daughters of a decent childhood by abusing and sexually molesting them. Flynt-Vega chronicles her desperate journey from emotional and physical devastation to a healthier lifestyle, a change she says occurred because of her developing faith in God. The book is not for the fainthearted, for it details both her own and her parents' thoroughly wretched upbringings, describes the incestuous relationships Flynt allegedly had with his daughters and details what the author casts as his prevailing mental illness. Flynt-Vega offers a constant rebuke to the 1996 box-office hit, The People vs. Larry Flynt, which portrayed her father as a stalwart, albeit disgusting, champion of free speech. Although the text is solidly written, thanks to the work of Schwartz, it is not flawless. Flynt-Vega borders on histrionic in some of her descriptions of Flynt's relationships to the people around him. She also takes cheap shots at one of her siblings. For the most part, though, she has successfully stepped back to describe the frenzied, trashy and tragic life and career of Larry Flynt as well as her own pilgrimage to faith.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.