In a bold and emotional new memoir set to hit bookshelves next month, Elizabeth Ann Hanks—known professionally as E.A. Hanks—opens up about the deeply complex and painful experience of growing up as the daughter of one of Hollywood’s most beloved actors: Tom Hanks.

Titled “Shadows of the Spotlight: A Daughter’s Reckoning,” the memoir paints a picture that starkly contrasts the wholesome, affable image associated with the Forrest Gump and Saving Private Ryan star. Elizabeth, now 42, recounts a childhood she describes as “riddled with chaos, violence, and deprivation,” where the spotlight that bathed her father often left her in emotional darkness.
A World Far From the Red Carpet
In the opening chapters of the memoir, E.A. Hanks describes a life defined by instability. While the world viewed Tom Hanks as America’s favorite dad, Elizabeth speaks of frequent absences, emotional distance, and a household marked by tension. “The world adored my father, but I barely knew the man behind the smile,” she writes. “I loved him with a ferocity I didn’t understand—an obsession born from absence, not presence.”
She recounts early memories of moving homes frequently, living out of boxes, and being shuffled between caregivers while her father pursued an increasingly demanding career in film. Her mother, Samantha Lewes, an actress who struggled with her own demons, reportedly battled depression and illness for much of Elizabeth’s youth.
Though Tom Hanks eventually rose to global superstardom, E.A. Hanks writes that financial and emotional insecurity defined her formative years. “We were far from poor,” she notes. “But emotional neglect creates its own kind of poverty.”
Obsession in the Shadows
One of the most arresting themes of the memoir is Elizabeth’s early obsession with her father. She describes poring over press clippings, taping every television appearance, and even dressing like characters he played. “He was both my idol and my ghost,” she writes. “A man always on screen, never in the kitchen.”
That obsession, she reveals, eventually turned inward—fueling years of anxiety, self-doubt, and a desperate hunger for validation. “Every praise he received from the world felt like a praise I had to earn,” she confesses. “I kept thinking: if I could be interesting enough, talented enough, maybe he’d look at me the way he looked at the camera.”
A Complicated Legacy
Tom Hanks, often lauded for his humility and kindness, is not outright villainized in the memoir. E.A. Hanks acknowledges his efforts in later years to repair their relationship, especially after the death of her mother in 2002. She describes heartfelt conversations and a growing understanding between them—but also admits that wounds from childhood are not easily healed.
“There’s no denying that he loves me,” she writes. “But love, when shaped by absence, becomes something fragile—something you’re never quite sure is real.”
Elizabeth also touches on the challenges of living in the shadow of not just her father, but the entire Hanks legacy. With half-brother Colin Hanks making his own name in acting, and Chet Hanks generating his own headlines, Elizabeth chose a different path—pursuing writing, journalism, and literature.
She is currently an editor at a respected literary journal and has published essays in The New York Times, The Guardian, and Vanity Fair. This memoir, she says, is not an act of revenge or exposure—but a form of catharsis.
Public and Private Reactions
Reactions to early excerpts have been mixed. Some praise E.A. Hanks for her courage in sharing a less-than-glamorous portrait of life in a celebrity family, while others question whether some memories may be colored by time and emotion.
A representative for Tom Hanks declined to comment on the memoir, stating only that “Tom is proud of all his children and wishes them happiness and peace.”
Meanwhile, readers and critics are bracing for what could be one of the most talked-about celebrity memoirs of the year—a raw, intelligent, and emotionally nuanced look at what it means to be the child of a man who belongs to the world, but not always to you.
As E.A. Hanks writes in the closing chapter, “My father taught the world how to feel. I’m still learning how to feel about him.”
In a bold and emotional new memoir set to hit bookshelves next month, Elizabeth Ann Hanks—known professionally as E.A. Hanks—opens up about the deeply complex and painful experience of growing up as the daughter of one of Hollywood’s most beloved actors: Tom Hanks.
Titled “Shadows of the Spotlight: A Daughter’s Reckoning,” the memoir paints a picture that starkly contrasts the wholesome, affable image associated with the Forrest Gump and Saving Private Ryan star. Elizabeth, now 42, recounts a childhood she describes as “riddled with chaos, violence, and deprivation,” where the spotlight that bathed her father often left her in emotional darkness.
A World Far From the Red Carpet
In the opening chapters of the memoir, E.A. Hanks describes a life defined by instability. While the world viewed Tom Hanks as America’s favorite dad, Elizabeth speaks of frequent absences, emotional distance, and a household marked by tension. “The world adored my father, but I barely knew the man behind the smile,” she writes. “I loved him with a ferocity I didn’t understand—an obsession born from absence, not presence.”
She recounts early memories of moving homes frequently, living out of boxes, and being shuffled between caregivers while her father pursued an increasingly demanding career in film. Her mother, Samantha Lewes, an actress who struggled with her own demons, reportedly battled depression and illness for much of Elizabeth’s youth.
Though Tom Hanks eventually rose to global superstardom, E.A. Hanks writes that financial and emotional insecurity defined her formative years. “We were far from poor,” she notes. “But emotional neglect creates its own kind of poverty.”
Obsession in the Shadows
One of the most arresting themes of the memoir is Elizabeth’s early obsession with her father. She describes poring over press clippings, taping every television appearance, and even dressing like characters he played. “He was both my idol and my ghost,” she writes. “A man always on screen, never in the kitchen.”
That obsession, she reveals, eventually turned inward—fueling years of anxiety, self-doubt, and a desperate hunger for validation. “Every praise he received from the world felt like a praise I had to earn,” she confesses. “I kept thinking: if I could be interesting enough, talented enough, maybe he’d look at me the way he looked at the camera.”
A Complicated Legacy
Tom Hanks, often lauded for his humility and kindness, is not outright villainized in the memoir. E.A. Hanks acknowledges his efforts in later years to repair their relationship, especially after the death of her mother in 2002. She describes heartfelt conversations and a growing understanding between them—but also admits that wounds from childhood are not easily healed.
“There’s no denying that he loves me,” she writes. “But love, when shaped by absence, becomes something fragile—something you’re never quite sure is real.”
Elizabeth also touches on the challenges of living in the shadow of not just her father, but the entire Hanks legacy. With half-brother Colin Hanks making his own name in acting, and Chet Hanks generating his own headlines, Elizabeth chose a different path—pursuing writing, journalism, and literature.
She is currently an editor at a respected literary journal and has published essays in The New York Times, The Guardian, and Vanity Fair. This memoir, she says, is not an act of revenge or exposure—but a form of catharsis.
Public and Private Reactions
Reactions to early excerpts have been mixed. Some praise E.A. Hanks for her courage in sharing a less-than-glamorous portrait of life in a celebrity family, while others question whether some memories may be colored by time and emotion.
A representative for Tom Hanks declined to comment on the memoir, stating only that “Tom is proud of all his children and wishes them happiness and peace.”
Meanwhile, readers and critics are bracing for what could be one of the most talked-about celebrity memoirs of the year—a raw, intelligent, and emotionally nuanced look at what it means to be the child of a man who belongs to the world, but not always to you.
As E.A. Hanks writes in the closing chapter, “My father taught the world how to feel. I’m still learning how to feel about him.”