by Antonia Quirke ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 1, 2007
Aside from the trying details of Quirke’s personal life, her memoir offers fresh, sharp takes on the movies and their stars.
The man in the tight white t-shirt sends a film critic reeling through life.
Sounds of a quarrel awaken Quirke, age 10. She goes downstairs to find her parents watching Marlon Brando brawling in A Streetcar Named Desire. The sight of the icon leaves Quirke gasping for breath and, ultimately, headed for a career as a film critic for several British publications and broadcast stations. Her vivid, singular pieces capture the perfection she sees on screen. James Deans’ hair suggests “a cartoon of dreams of a better world…” Al Pacino first uses his voice like an “oboe,” then later like “an electric guitar.” Bogart shows that “life can be like a movie you’d rather not be in.” Indeed, in the matter of life outside the cinema lies the rub for Quirke. No man she meets matches the aesthetic perfection she sees on the screen. Her consciousness forged by the movies, she trips over one relationship after another. There is the writer who wears clothes until they fall apart, who never brushes his teeth or finishes his magnum opus. There is the newspaper editor who drinks too much. And there is the actor whose family shows up nude at parties. Quirke relates all this in a sometimes loopy style. Of one boyfriend she writes, “I is saved. I wanted to be I, but Jim was I, I thought.” She stumbles through work, as well. When an editor hands her an interview with Jeff Bridges, she turns it into a shambles. Her fumbling ineptitude may amuse some (including agents who, she says, sense film potential in her misadventures). Others may wish there were some way she could get a life.
Aside from the trying details of Quirke’s personal life, her memoir offers fresh, sharp takes on the movies and their stars.Pub Date: June 1, 2007
ISBN: 978-158567-915-7
Page Count: 310
Publisher: Overlook
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2007
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by Chester Nez with Judith Schiess Avila ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 6, 2011
A unique, inspiring story by a member of the Greatest Generation.
A firsthand account of how the Navajo language was used to help defeat the Japanese in World War II.
At the age of 17, Nez (an English name assigned to him in kindergarten) volunteered for the Marines just months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Growing up in a traditional Navajo community, he became fluent in English, his second language, in government-run boarding schools. The author writes that he wanted to serve his country and explore “the possibilities and opportunities offered out there in the larger world.” Because he was bilingual, he was one of the original 29 “code talkers” selected to develop a secret, unbreakable code based on the Navajo language, which was to be used for battlefield military communications on the Pacific front. Because the Navajo language is tonal and unwritten, it is extremely difficult for a non-native speaker to learn. The code created an alphabet based on English words such as ant for “A,” which were then translated into its Navajo equivalent. On the battlefield, Navajo code talkers would use voice transmissions over the radio, spoken in Navajo to convey secret information. Nez writes movingly about the hard-fought battles waged by the Marines to recapture Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima and others, in which he and his fellow code talkers played a crucial role. He situates his wartime experiences in the context of his life before the war, growing up on a sheep farm, and after when he worked for the VA and raised a family in New Mexico. Although he had hoped to make his family proud of his wartime role, until 1968 the code was classified and he was sworn to silence. He sums up his life “as better than he could ever have expected,” and looks back with pride on the part he played in “a new, triumphant oral and written [Navajo] tradition,” his culture's contribution to victory.
A unique, inspiring story by a member of the Greatest Generation.Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-425-24423-4
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Dutton Caliber
Review Posted Online: July 5, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2011
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by Robin Roberts with Veronica Chambers ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 22, 2014
At-times inspirational memoir about a journalist’s battle with a grave disease she had to face while also dealing with her...
With the assistance of Chambers (co-author; Yes, Chef, 2012, etc.), broadcaster Roberts (From the Heart: Eight Rules to Live By, 2008) chronicles her struggles with myelodysplastic syndrome, a rare condition that affects blood and bone marrow.
The author is a well-known newscaster, formerly on SportsCenter and now one of the anchors of Good Morning America. In 2007, she was diagnosed with breast cancer, which she successfully fought with surgery, chemotherapy and radiation treatment. Five years later, after returning from her news assignment covering the 2012 Academy Awards, she learned that chemotherapy had resulted in her developing MDS, which led to an acute form of leukemia. Without a bone marrow transplant, her projected life expectancy was two years. While Roberts searched for a compatible donor and prepared for the transplant, her aging mother’s health also began to gravely deteriorate. Roberts faced her misfortune with an athlete’s mentality, showing strength against both her disease and the loss of her mother. This is reflected in her narration, which rarely veers toward melodrama or self-pity. Even in the chapters describing the transplantion process and its immediate aftermath, which make for the most intimate parts of the book, Roberts maintains her positivity. However, despite the author’s best efforts to communicate the challenges of her experience and inspire empathy, readers are constantly reminded of her celebrity status and, as a result, are always kept at arm's length. The sections involving Roberts’ family partly counter this problem, since it is in these scenes that she becomes any daughter, any sister, any lover, struggling with a life-threatening disease. “[I]f there’s one thing that spending a year fighting for your life against a rare and insidious…disease will teach you,” she writes, “it’s that time is not to be wasted.”
At-times inspirational memoir about a journalist’s battle with a grave disease she had to face while also dealing with her mother’s passing.Pub Date: April 22, 2014
ISBN: 978-1-4555-7845-0
Page Count: 272
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Review Posted Online: March 17, 2014
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2014
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by Robin Roberts with Michelle Burford
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