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Lynn Barber

Auteur de An Education

14+ oeuvres 554 utilisateurs 21 critiques

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Œuvres de Lynn Barber

Oeuvres associées

Another Part of the Wood (1968) — Introduction, quelques éditions179 exemplaires
Granta 82: Life's Like That (2003) — Contributeur — 145 exemplaires

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As I'm pretty much Lynn Barber's age, as I used to enjoy her interviews in the Observer, and as we both lived our pre-university lives in London, I thought this would be a book to savour.

Well, I dunno really. I whisked through it: it's a quick and easy read. Her teenage years were very different from my own, but after she'd described her childhood and That Teenage Adventure, the book settled down into giving a resume of her career. We learn little of Lynn the wife, Lynn the mother, Lynn the friend or neighbour, and all the other characters in the book, however central to her life, remain hazy. This book is about Lynn the journalist and author. Which is fine, but I wasn't particularly engaged.

Still, it's a short book, and soon over.

One for the charity shop pile.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Margaret09 | 16 autres critiques | Apr 15, 2024 |
I read it fully unto the An Education chapter then skipped about as a found parts of it interesting. It was definitely worth reading the An Education section to see where the story started and how they grew it into a great movie. The chapter about the start up of Penthouse Magazine was also pretty interesting. My take, worth borrowing but definitely not worth buying.
 
Signalé
hellokirsti | 16 autres critiques | Jan 3, 2024 |
Breezy, approachable overview of popular biology and biologists in the mid-19th century. Barber identifies the craze for natural history amongst the public, and blames its demise on the professionalisation and specialisation of science, plus the challenge to religion raised by Darwinism. I'm not sure I buy the thesis completely, but the book has excellent one-chapter summaries of figures like Gosse, Owen, and Miller – the latter an enormously influential self-made geologist now totally obscure.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
adzebill | 1 autre critique | Dec 28, 2017 |
I’d already seen and liked the film adaptation of An Education, but was interested to find out that the episode focused on by the film (Lynne Barber’s teenage affair with a middle-aged con man and the strange way her parents encouraged the relationship) is only one chapter of the book. Her childhood, her career as a writer, her time at Oxford University and her relationship with her husband are also covered, all in a very witty style. What makes the book so entertaining is Lynne Barber’s personality, her writing voice, and her insight into people, which also made her such a successful interviewer. One thing I found interesting is that she dislikes her speaking voice, the elocution-lesson accent she acquired in childhood and her tendency to waffle, and feels that her writing expresses her true self far better. She is definitely very honest, both about herself and about her opinions of other people. If an author is completely candid, it makes an autobiography much more compelling, and An Education is definitely the kind of page-turner you can read in one sitting. [2011]… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
papercat | 16 autres critiques | Jun 27, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Aussi par
2
Membres
554
Popularité
#45,050
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
21
ISBN
37
Langues
6

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