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The Tell

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The Tell

By: Amy Griffin
Narrated by: Amy Griffin
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

‘For such a long time, people discussed my running. It took up so much space in my life. And yet nobody ever thought to ask:


What are you running from?’

For decades, Amy ran. Through the dirt roads of Amarillo, Texas, where she grew up; to the streets of New York, where she built her adult life; through marriage, motherhood, and a thriving career. To outsiders, it all looked, in many ways, perfect. But Amy was running from something – a secret she was keeping not only from her family and friends, but unconsciously from something terrible in her past.

When her ten-year-old daughter confronts her on the distance between them, Amy is propelled to confront what she has spent a lifetime trying to escape. So begins Amy’s journey through the world of MDMA-assisted psychedelic therapy, to the limits of the judicial system, and ultimately, home to the Texas, where her story began.

In her relentless search for the truth, Griffin scrutinises the pursuit of perfectionism, control, and maintaining appearances that drives so many women. She asks the question: When, in our path from girlhood to womanhood, did we learn to look outside ourselves for validation? And what kind of freedom is possible if we better protect girls from being taken advantage of on this journey. Heartbreaking, powerful and raw, The Tell points a way forward for all of us, shedding light on the courage and power of truth-telling that’s required to move through trauma.

© Amy Griffin 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

Editors Select Women New York

Critic reviews

An extraordinary memoir by an author who ran literally from the dirt roads where she grew up in Texas to the streets of New York City in search of perfection as a wife, as a mother, as a highly successful business woman. But what she did not realize was that she was running from something that she had buried many years ago… I was just floored when I read Amy’s story.
Transformative and illuminating. Through every agonizing revelation, Amy Griffin refuses to pave over her pain, opting instead to embrace the entirety of it. This is a powerful story of what can happen self-compassion replaces fear as the governing force of one’s life.
The Tell is raw, brave and deeply freeing…Amy, your courage is a light for so many. I’m so proud to stand beside you as you share this masterpiece with the world.
Hope, heart and honesty… another amazing woman sharing her story.
The Tell is the most powerful memoir I’ve read in years. It’s the rare story that will liberate you from shame, empower you to stop cycles of abuse, and make it safer for you to tell the truth.
Our minds may repress, but our bodies keep the score. The Tell by Amy Griffin is an honest book that will help us trust that wisdom. There is no better guide than Griffin, whose story proves it is what we do with our experience that matters.
Those of us lucky to know Amy Griffin know she's a lovely person in every way. Her courageous, generous memoir is both a reckoning with a terrible, all-too-common experience... and a searching and empathetic inquiry into the meanings of goodness, self-blame, and forgiveness.
An extraordinary memoir paced like an expertly plotted thriller . . . I will be thinking about this book for a long time.
I started The Tell while sitting in my car . . . and literally spent the morning in the parking lot because I couldn’t stop reading. Your own heart will break, and mend, as you read.
With this powerful little book, she joins the ranks of women who, like the brilliant Gisèle Pelicot in France, are shaking off the stigma of abuse and reattaching it to the perpetrators.
All stars
Most relevant
It broke my heart to listen to this story, and at the same time I am in awe of Amy’s resilience.

A great tale of resilience

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It’s a memoir and I don’t think I really cared - she came across as a middle class entitled women who could afford the hours of therapy to find herself- so many can’t -

A little self centred for me-

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Very honestly told painful story. Makes you think about the power of unconscious mind, how very little we know about our own brains

Very honest

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This seemed to ramble on and on with a wow is me theme.
The narration really bland and monotone.
Perhaps it could be a little better with a different narrator

Somewhat self indulgent

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In short, my problem with The Tell is that it asks the reader to treat drug assisted recovered memories as solid fact, without any meaningful external corroboration, and then builds serious moral accusations on top of that. The book leans heavily on the idea that buried trauma explains long standing unease, strained relationships, and a sense of something being wrong, while skating past the very real possibility that these feelings could come from temperament, anxiety, relationship dynamics, or memory distortion introduced by the therapy itself. It treats remembering as revelation, rather than as reconstruction, ignoring the large body of evidence showing how malleable memory is, especially under suggestion and MDMA. By the end, I felt it confused emotional relief with truth, and certainty with justice, which makes the story feel less like a careful reckoning and more like a cautionary tale about how convincing a false narrative can become once it feels subjectively real.

A truly awful book

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