Hi Welcome to your personal library
Total eBook Downloads | So far this week 76391 | Last week 87999

Try to Tell the Story
 
 
 
 
Try to Tell the Story by David Thomson
 
USD 23.95
 
Try to Tell the Story
David Thomson
View in Browser
Download Standalone
Get DNL Reader
To view the Standalone version, you require the installation of the small file size DNL Reader. To get the DNL Reader, click the "Get DNL Reader" button.
 
 
 
Downloads : 164
File Size : 454.48K
 
 
Publisher : Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Limitations : 1 Free Chapter $23.95 to buy
 
Supplier : Random House, Inc.
ISBN : 9780307271334
 
 
Popularity: 6428
Unpopularity: 6428
My vote: I love !
Results
 
 
 
Other titles from the same author :
>>
Other titles from the same publisher :
>>
 
 
 
  Overview  
 

From one of our most celebrated film critics and historians now comes a beautifully written memoir about his first eighteen years, growing up as an only child in south London in the midforties and late fifties. Told with elegance and restraint, partly from the point of view of a child, partly from that of an adult, it is the story of a lonely, stammering boy cared for by a matriarchy of his mother, grandmother, and an upstairs tenant, Miss Davis, to which he adds an imaginary sister, Sally. At the heart of this story is David Thomson’s profound sadness at being abandoned by a cold and distant father who visits only on weekends and keeps, as Thomson later discovers, another household.

Thomson gives a vivid picture of London in the aftermath of the war, whether it is his grandmother bringing him to a street corner to see Churchill or the bombed-out houses that still smelled of acrid smoke where, though forbidden, he played. Movies became his great escape, and the worlds revealed in Henry V, Red River, The Third Man, and Citizen Kane were part of his rich imaginative life, one that gained him a scholarship to public and eventually film school. And though his father could never tell his son he loved him, he spent the first part of vacations with him and he came back most weekends, taking Thomson to everything from boxing to cricket matches. But as Thomson admits, “I am still, years after his death, bewildered and pained by my father, and trying to love him—or find his love for me.”

Try to Tell the Story is a haunting and unsentimental look at the fragility of family relationships, a memoir of growing up in the absence of a full-time father, with movies and sports heroes as one’s only touchstones.

 
 
 
Get DNL Reader, it’s free.
Create your own eBook
Download ePageWiz
 
 
 
 
site map  |  home  |  contact  |  terms and conditions  |  privacy policy
 
  © 2009  DNAML