That's That
A Memoir
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
Starred review from June 17, 2013
Broderick (Orangutan) was raised in Northern Ireland's County Tyrone during the "Troubles" that spanned nearly four decades. These formative years are told through snippets of daily life: beatings from teachers at his school, conversations with relatives, and various "firsts" as an adolescent. The news of the dayâthe bombings, kidnappings, and murders of Catholics and Protestantsâinfluenced the everyday routine under his protective mother. Desperate to keep her family safe, she refuses him any independence: "The answer is no, and that's that." With her son on the brink of total rebellion, she relents and Broderick matures from the mischievous, curious altar boy into a teenager with everything to prove and nothing to lose. Somehow, Broderick keeps the reader on the edge of laughter through many otherwise horrifying experiences and bad choices. He is a storyteller of great depth, sharing his life with the kind of brutal honesty and narrative skill rarely expected or found in a memoirist. Broderick is a writer's writer who has achieved a profound telling of his experience of Northern Ireland's Troubles.
Growing up in Northern Ireland at any point after "the Troubles" between Protestants and Catholics started in the 1960s would test anyone. Adding abusive teachers and a stultifying home life only makes things more interesting. Narrator Gerard Doyle has a spare, sad Irish voice that carries this memoir along wonderfully. The author's story is at once harrowing and hopeful, with Broderick's mother's final words echoed in the title of the book. Doyle creates an atmosphere that demands our attention, using pauses and a lyrical sense of pacing to emotionally engage us. He has terrific diction, and although we've heard stories like this before, Doyle makes this one fresh, urgent, and immersive. R.I.G. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
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