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Half the House: A Memoir

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
1968

Author
  
Richard Hoffman

4.3/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Originally published
  
1968

Genre
  
Novel

Half the House: A Memoir t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTz3Iqk4cIwNh6dep

Publisher
  
Harcourt Brace and New Rivers Press (with postscript)

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Pages
  
2180 pp (New Rivers Press paperback edition)

Similar
  
Gold Star Road, Interference & Other Stories, The Rhythm Book, Family Member's Survival, London to Lisbon

Half the House: a memoir is written by Richard Hoffman. It was first published in 1995, then republished in 2005 with an afterword from 1996 and a postscript from 2005.

Hoffman writes after the dedication page that "This is not a work of fiction. It contains no composite characters, no invented scenes. I have, in most instances, altered the names of persons outside my family. In one instance, on principle, I have not."

That one person is Tom Feifel, the coach who abused the 10-year-old Hoffman.

Plot outline

Half the House depicts Hoffman’s family as his parents struggle to care for two of his brothers who are terminally ill with muscular dystrophy. Hoffman recounts the sexual abuse he suffered at the age of ten by Tom Feifel, the coach of the 110 pound football team. Feifel spends a lot of time with Scooter, a boy a grade ahead of Hoffman at school. Feifel starts to pick Hoffman up for practice and shows him pornography. Hoffman becomes his new favored companion and is shown adult pornography on 8mm movies and pornographic cartoons featuring Disney cartoon characters. He was repeatedly molested and raped by Feifel for some months until he threatened to say something in confessional. Feifel then ignores him and moves on to another boy.

Hoffman is also physically abused by his alcoholic father.

Many years later, now married with two children, Hoffman confronts his father. There is a reconciliation and he brings his own children to visit.

At the age of 68, Feifel was arrested, convicted, and imprisoned largely as the result of the publication of Hoffman’s memoir. He had been arrested twice before for sexually assaulting young boys but had never been sent to jail. In 1995, a number of boys agreed to testify, and Hoffman spoke to one of them 11-year-old Michael, to thank him and give him confidence. Hoffman has said that “it has been determined that he violated upwards of 400 boys during his nearly four decades of coaching”.

References

Half the House: A Memoir Wikipedia