Can you name this famous father and son? (Check In First comment)
**Josh Brolin’s Candid Memoir: From Under the Truck Reveals a Life of Struggle and Triumph**
Hollywood often projects effortless glamour, but Josh Brolin’s memoir *From Under the Truck* (published November 19, 2024) shatters that illusion. The actor delivers a raw, non-linear account of his life—marked by an unconventional childhood, addiction battles, profound losses, and eventual sobriety—proving that even stars carry deep scars.
Brolin’s early years unfolded on a California ranch far from Tinseltown. His mother, Jane Brolin, a fierce wildlife conservationist, ran a refuge with rescued animals like wolves, cougars, bobcats, and coyotes. Discipline took extreme forms: she’d unleash the creatures on her sons, yelling “sic ’em” as the boys raced for safety behind doors. Brolin recalls the terror—”You knew if you didn’t get on the other side of that shut door within a couple of seconds, you’d be cleaning up fresh bloody marks”—yet he harbors no bitterness. “She was hard, yes, but I always wanted her around,” he reflects, crediting her intensity for shaping his resilience and respect for danger.
Jane died in a 1995 car accident at 55, a loss that haunted Brolin during his addiction years. He once viewed 55 as a “respectable” age to die, tied to his self-destructive mindset. Now 56 (and sober since 2013), he regrets that limited perspective, embracing longer life and clarity.
His father, actor James Brolin, married Barbra Streisand, who became a stepmother offering blunt tough love. In one anecdote, when Brolin asked for wine, Streisand shot back, “Aren’t you an alcoholic?” and refused: “Alcoholics can’t drink wine because it’s bad for them.” Her directness—described as “washing her tongue with a bulls*** cleanser”—stung but helped steer him toward accountability.
Addiction began young: marijuana at nine, LSD at 13, escalating into alcoholism. A pivotal moment came in 2013 at his 99-year-old grandmother’s deathbed. Arriving hungover and reeking of booze after waking on the streets, he saw her lift her head, smile at him—and knew it was his last drink. “I knew that was going to be the last time I drank,” he said. Over a decade sober, he now cherishes the clarity: “I love being sober. I have more fun… There’s nothing that I go through that I am absolutely certain wouldn’t be worse if I was drinking.”
Brolin embraces aging: “I like getting older. It’s like a great excuse to finally go, ‘OK, just mellow out.’” His career—spanning *No Country for Old Men*, *Avengers: Infinity War*, and *Sicario*—highlights versatility, but the memoir stresses private battles beneath public success.
Family ties, from his mother’s wild influence to Streisand’s candor and his own relationships, fueled growth. The book isn’t a linear celebrity tale but a patchwork of vignettes on pain, humor, devotion, and redemption. It shows fame doesn’t insulate from hardship—and transformation is possible through honesty and reflection.
*From Under the Truck* invites readers into a journey of resilience, reminding us that hidden burdens often forge the deepest strength. Brolin’s story is a blueprint for facing life’s chaos with hard-won wisdom.



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