The Cut that Wouldn't Heal: Finding My Father
Autor William Leithen Limba Engleză Paperback – 7 iun 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781526623799
ISBN-10: 152662379X
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 152662379X
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
NEW READERSHIP APPEAL: The Cut that Wouldn't Heal is a break from William Leith's usual, comic and lighthearted norm. The book will be a stylish Demy, refreshing Leith's brand, and positioning the book for a fresh audience.
Notă biografică
William Leith has worked as a columnist and feature writer at the Independent on Sunday, the Mail on Sunday and the Observer. His writing spans a wide range of subjects, from food to celebrity, cosmetic surgery to fashion and film. He has written about African monarchs, political tension in Palestine, gold mining in the Klondike, Hollywood film directors, diet gurus and the death of James Dean. He is the author of three previous books: The Hungry Years, Bits of Me Are Falling Apart and The Trick.
Recenzii
PRAISE FOR THE CUT THAT WOULDN'T HEAL: The Cut That Wouldn't Heal should be depressing, but it is in fact weirdly exhilarating, largely because the author tracks his own feelings, however untoward, with a darkly comical precision . What might, in other hands, have been simply macabre becomes peculiarly mesmerising.
Honest without oversharing, William Leith is such a perfect writer . The Cut that Wouldn't Heal is a triumph and deeply moving. Wonderful.
William Leith is a very fine writer, defined by a compulsive honesty: not the heavily-curated oversharing of social media culture, but the real, uncomfortable thing. This book, which deals in the sometimes absurdist agonies of grief - and indeed of life - is his best yet.
A reckoning with the past by a writer whose past offers plenty to reckon with . Pacily written . satisfyingly structured
An intensely readable study of love and regret.
As mysterious and unsettling as a Cold War thriller - the search for self amidst the puzzle of a brilliant absentee father.
PRAISE FOR THE TRICK: The Trick takes all of Leith's writing habits - his mazy streams of consciousness (few writers are quite so enamoured of, or good at, watching themselves think) and his love of axiom - and, if anything, ups the ante... Hugely enjoyable.
PRAISE FOR THE HUNGRY YEARS: Compulsively readable. I gulped it down in a couple of greedy bites ... It is a powerful memoir ... it has the unusual qualities of heart and daring. In the end, these are what stay inside you.
Honest without oversharing, William Leith is such a perfect writer . The Cut that Wouldn't Heal is a triumph and deeply moving. Wonderful.
William Leith is a very fine writer, defined by a compulsive honesty: not the heavily-curated oversharing of social media culture, but the real, uncomfortable thing. This book, which deals in the sometimes absurdist agonies of grief - and indeed of life - is his best yet.
A reckoning with the past by a writer whose past offers plenty to reckon with . Pacily written . satisfyingly structured
An intensely readable study of love and regret.
As mysterious and unsettling as a Cold War thriller - the search for self amidst the puzzle of a brilliant absentee father.
PRAISE FOR THE TRICK: The Trick takes all of Leith's writing habits - his mazy streams of consciousness (few writers are quite so enamoured of, or good at, watching themselves think) and his love of axiom - and, if anything, ups the ante... Hugely enjoyable.
PRAISE FOR THE HUNGRY YEARS: Compulsively readable. I gulped it down in a couple of greedy bites ... It is a powerful memoir ... it has the unusual qualities of heart and daring. In the end, these are what stay inside you.