Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Keri Pickett. By Audio Scope.
The regular list price is $10.99.
Sells new for $0.94.
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No comments about Love in the 90's: The Story of a Lifelong Love : A Granddaughter's Portrait.
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Robin Gaby Fisher. By Blackstone Audiobooks, Inc..
Sells new for $19.95.
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No comments about After the Fire: A True Story of Love and Survival.
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Terry Walton. By Isis.
Sells new for $61.95.
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No comments about My Life On A Hillside Allotment.
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Margaret Powell. By Ulverscroft Soundings Ltd.
Sells new for $49.95.
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No comments about Climbing the Stairs.
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Peter O'Sullevan. By Hodder Headline.
The regular list price is $16.99.
Sells new for $52.31.
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No comments about Calling the Horses (Hodder Headline Sporting Heroes).
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Lester Yami. By Louis Braille Audio.
The regular list price is $54.95.
Sells new for $49.00.
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No comments about Yami: The Autobiography.
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Robert E. Peary. By Joss Recordings.
Sells new for $59.95.
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No comments about The North Pole (Library Edition).
Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Eric Newby. By HarperCollins Audio.
There are some available for $186.85.
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5 comments about Love and War in the Apennines.
- Eric Newby knows how to tell a story. This is one of the few books that I started over again immediately after finishing it the first time. The insight into the minds of these extraordinary Italian farmers who hid prisoners of war without thought to their own lives and safety is one of the great adventure reads to come out of World War II. Having passed through this countryside so many times traveling between Milan and Florence, I know first hand how rugged it is. Just to get through these mountains by train is an adventure, as there are dozens of tunnels to pass through after one leaves Bologna. Newby brings the setting to life for the reader, and we walk in his footsteps as he falls upon adverture after another. There is almost an unreal quality to this story, expecially his meeting the wonderful mountain men who live in the most remote parts of these mountains. If you want a really good read, grab a copy of this book. You will not be disappointed.
- Newby's writing can be rather dry, but in this recounting of his escape from the Germans in WWII Italy, he strikes a fine balance between mawkish sentimentalism and tough-guy posturing. An engrossing narration about the extraordinary measures ordinary people can and will resort to, to stay alive and to do what they think is right. Encouraging, inspiring, and highly recommended.
- During World War II, the rural citizens of northern Italy vowed to assist Allied soldiers on the run in their mountainous region. They were operating on an informed heart, on the Golden Rule, wanting to give aid to those who opposed the hated Fascists and Nazis as they would hope someone would help their own sons. And while the Allies were protected by the Geneva Convention should they be captured, the citizens were not and they were subject to less humane punishment, sometimes torture and death, if their actions were found out. But they did it anyway. It is these people, who otherwise lived a pastoral, ancient way of life, whom travel writer extraordinaire Eric Newby profiles in his memoir, LOVE AND WAR IN THE APENNINES.
Those familiar with Newby's other books will find his signature wit, self-deprecating humor and descriptive powers at work here, but his curiosity and appreciation of other people and cultures is in highest gear. He comes to meet the peasantry of northern Italy after fleeing a prison during the chaos following the ouster of Mussolini in September 1943. He is helped by a succession of individuals and families, including the woman who would become his wife and companion in later adventures, the estimable Wanda. The book ends with his unfortunate recapture by the Germans and in an epilogue he revisits the people who took him in ten years after. Newby is a hugely gifted writer, his sentences are knowing and clear as a bell. He orders information rhythmically, always knows when less is more and more is more. He never bows to sentimentality, never sells anyone out. He does a remarkable job of expressing the fear and dispiritedness that politics and war heave on a people, at the same time revealing their resilience. There is much to admire in this book.
- The Italians Newby depicts in this memoir (and also in his "A Small Place in Italy") are often funny, but never buffoonish. Newby's warm admiration for country folk is always evident, as in this passage where a retired stonemason helps remove an enormous boulder from the hideout the locals are making for him:
"He went over it with his hands, very slowly, almost lovingly. It must have weighed half a ton. Then, when he had finished caressing it, he called for a sledgehammer and hit it deliberately but not particularly hard and it broke into two almost equal halves. It was like magic and I would not have been surprised if a toad had emerged from it and turned into a princess who had been asleep for a million years." Readers familiar with Newby's travel writing will find all his strengths here: his eye for detail, his warmth of character, his humor (mostly self-deprecating). They will also find a love story -- one made all the more poignant by Newby's craftsmanlike selection of few but telling scenes.
- The Italians Newby depicts in this memoir (and also in his "A Small Place in Italy") are often funny, but never buffoonish. Newby's warm admiration for country folk is always evident, as in this passage where a retired stonemason helps remove an enormous boulder from the hideout the locals are making for him:
"He went over it with his hands, very slowly, almost lovingly. It must have weighed half a ton. Then, when he had finished caressing it, he called for a sledgehammer and hit it deliberately but not particularly hard and it broke into two almost equal halves. It was like magic and I would not have been surprised if a toad had emerged from it and turned into a princess who had been asleep for a million years." Readers familiar with Newby's travel writing will find all his strengths here: his eye for detail, his warmth of character, his humor (mostly self-deprecating). They will also find a love story -- one made all the more poignant by Newby's craftsmanlike selection of few but telling scenes.
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Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Jackie Torrence. By August House Publishers.
There are some available for $1.29.
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1 comments about My Grandmother's Treasure (American Storytelling).
- I heard Ms. Torrence tell the story of her grandmother's apron on NPR recently (from "My Grandmother's Treasure") and I was mesmerized. Her rich voice, direct and meaningful language, and the story itself seen from her childhood perspective but told from her adult viewpoint and understanding all blended to create a delicious story-telling experience for me. Jackie, if you read this, thank you for taking the time and energy to tell your stories on tape so that others like me could hear and treasure them even as we ourselves look back on our own long roads in this life.
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Posted in Biography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Christopher Hilton. By CYP Ltd.
Sells new for $7.00.
There are some available for $7.80.
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No comments about Johnny Herbert (Grand Prix Heroes).
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