Travelling to Work
Diaries 1988—1998
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 1, 2015
Now is the '90s of our discontent.... It's not exactly a decennium horribilis that Monty Python member and world traveler Palin (The Truth, 2013, etc.) describes in this journal. As the author notes at the start of this third volume, he closed the late 1980s with the sense that he'd been frittering away his life, someone "who had reached his mid-forties with no great adventures to show for it." Be careful what you wish for, for Palin immediately found himself swept up in what would become a quarter-century-long series of televised adventures, beginning with sturdy vehicles such as Around the World in Eighty Days and Pole to Pole and spinning off in all sorts of directions. In between, though, were the standard press junkets: show up for a screening, a book signing, a gallery opening, "pontificate on the Python years and become pretentious." Palin reveals himself to be a serious, sympathetic fellow most of the time, if sometimes given to self-doubt and moping. At turns, he is speaking in hushed tones with Fergie, the Duchess of York, and finding her more congenial and substantial than he might have thought ("She paints a depressing, almost frightening, picture of the royal life"); worrying at world events such as a renewed IRA bombing campaign in London ("they kill out of an intensity, a fierceness, a dogged, deep unshakeable belief, as people have done throughout history"); and trying to pull together sometimes-warring factions into a reunion ("the unsatisfactory Python stage show business pushes itself, once again, into the front of my mind"). The decade's worth of notes ends on a rather dour note, befitting a gloomy English new year that, of course, he could escape by hopping on a jet to some more tropical clime. A satisfying if sometimes-dark read for Palin's many fans. Those interested in the inner workings of showbiz will find much of value, too.
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September 15, 2015
The third volume of published diaries by Monty Python member and renaissance man Palin continues the richly detailed and entertaining record of his life spanning a decade highlighted by successful travel documentaries, film and television acting, the writing of his first novel, and such life-altering events as the deaths of his mother and of founding Python member Graham Chapman. During these years he is "fundamentally wary" but "drawn to risk like a moth to a flame," as he states in his introduction, describing his personality as constantly attracted to doing something he has never done before. Along with portrayals of his work, Palin expresses self-doubts and performs self-examination, and his diaries offer novelistic detail on topics ranging from landscapes and food to people and current events, recounting life's progressions, diversions, and observations. VERDICT The continuing chronicles of Palin will be of interest to Python and Palin fans, Anglophiles, and anyone who has interest in the cultural world of the 1990s, as they provide delightful reading and time well spent with a fascinating and perceptive man.--James Collins, Morristown-Morris Twp. P.L., NJ
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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