‘Williams’s memoir is as flinty, earthy  and plain-spoken as her songs’  <B><I>New York Times</I></B><BR/>‘The often hilarious, occasionally harrowing <I>Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You </I>is a bracingly candid chronicle of a sui generis character plotting a ramshackle but ultimately  triumphant trajectory’  <B><I>Wall Street Journal</I></B><BR/>‘An engaging read and beautifully written’ <B><I>MOJO </I></B><BR/><BR/><B>The beloved and iconic singer-songwriter and three-time Grammy winner opens up about her traumatic childhood in the Deep South, her years of being overlooked in the music industry, and the stories that inspired her enduring songs. </B><BR/><BR/> Lucinda Williams’s rise to fame was anything but easy. Raised in a working-class family in the Deep South, she moved from town to town each time her father—a poet, a textbook salesman, a professor, a