Laverne Cox's memoir "Transcendent" is an immersive and often harrowing account of her journey from a traumatic childhood in the deep south to Hollywood stardom.
The book offers a powerful testament to resilience in the face of profound systemic and familial adversity.
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An Eloquent Account of Survival
The narrative explores Cox's early life in Mobile, Alabama, where she faced severe hostility from both her school environment and her own family.
Raised as a boy, she experienced immediate backlash for expressing her gender nonconforming identity.
Her mother signed her up for failed conversion therapy, reinforcing a deep sense of shame that culminated in a suicide attempt at age eleven.
The book effectively captures the immense psychological burden of navigating a world hostile to difference.
A significant portion of the memoir focuses on Cox's turbulent relationship with her mother, Gloria.
It details instances of severe emotional rejection, including an episode where both Cox and her twin brother Lamar were temporarily abandoned at their estranged father's home and placed in an orphanage for a month.
Cox approaches these painful memories with a tone aimed at understanding rather than revenge.
She acknowledges her mother's financial hardships and credits her for supporting their enrollment at the Alabama School of Fine Arts, which set both siblings on their career paths.
The Long Road to Hollywood
Beyond familial struggles, the memoir chronicles Cox's 20-year struggle in New York City before landing her breakthrough role as Sophia Burset in "Orange Is the New Black."