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Basil Street Blues: A Memoir
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Basil Street Blues: A Memoir in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $23.95

Barnes and Noble
Basil Street Blues: A Memoir in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $23.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
"A wonderful offbeat memoir.... Holroyd has written perhaps his best book yet."—Ben Macintyre,
New York Times Book Review
Renowned biographer Michael Holroyd had always assumed that his own family was perfectly English, or at least perfectly ordinary. But an investigation into the Holroyd past—guided by old photograph albums, crumbling documents, and his parents' wildly divergent accounts of their lives—gradually yields clues to a constellation of startling events and eccentric characters: a slow decline from English nobility on one side, a dramatic Scandinavian ancestry on the other. Fires, suicides, bankruptcies, divorces, unconsummated longings, and the rumor of an Indian tea fortune permeate this wry, candid memoir, "part multiple biography, part autobiography, but principally an oblique investigation of the biographer's art" (
). "[A] perfect example of a memoir that entrances me."—Katherine A. Powers,
Boston Sunday Globe
"[O]ne of the few [biographers] who can convey what makes ordinary as well as extraordinary mortals live in our minds."—
Los Angeles Times
New York Times Book Review
Renowned biographer Michael Holroyd had always assumed that his own family was perfectly English, or at least perfectly ordinary. But an investigation into the Holroyd past—guided by old photograph albums, crumbling documents, and his parents' wildly divergent accounts of their lives—gradually yields clues to a constellation of startling events and eccentric characters: a slow decline from English nobility on one side, a dramatic Scandinavian ancestry on the other. Fires, suicides, bankruptcies, divorces, unconsummated longings, and the rumor of an Indian tea fortune permeate this wry, candid memoir, "part multiple biography, part autobiography, but principally an oblique investigation of the biographer's art" (
). "[A] perfect example of a memoir that entrances me."—Katherine A. Powers,
Boston Sunday Globe
"[O]ne of the few [biographers] who can convey what makes ordinary as well as extraordinary mortals live in our minds."—
Los Angeles Times
"A wonderful offbeat memoir.... Holroyd has written perhaps his best book yet."—Ben Macintyre,
New York Times Book Review
Renowned biographer Michael Holroyd had always assumed that his own family was perfectly English, or at least perfectly ordinary. But an investigation into the Holroyd past—guided by old photograph albums, crumbling documents, and his parents' wildly divergent accounts of their lives—gradually yields clues to a constellation of startling events and eccentric characters: a slow decline from English nobility on one side, a dramatic Scandinavian ancestry on the other. Fires, suicides, bankruptcies, divorces, unconsummated longings, and the rumor of an Indian tea fortune permeate this wry, candid memoir, "part multiple biography, part autobiography, but principally an oblique investigation of the biographer's art" (
). "[A] perfect example of a memoir that entrances me."—Katherine A. Powers,
Boston Sunday Globe
"[O]ne of the few [biographers] who can convey what makes ordinary as well as extraordinary mortals live in our minds."—
Los Angeles Times
New York Times Book Review
Renowned biographer Michael Holroyd had always assumed that his own family was perfectly English, or at least perfectly ordinary. But an investigation into the Holroyd past—guided by old photograph albums, crumbling documents, and his parents' wildly divergent accounts of their lives—gradually yields clues to a constellation of startling events and eccentric characters: a slow decline from English nobility on one side, a dramatic Scandinavian ancestry on the other. Fires, suicides, bankruptcies, divorces, unconsummated longings, and the rumor of an Indian tea fortune permeate this wry, candid memoir, "part multiple biography, part autobiography, but principally an oblique investigation of the biographer's art" (
). "[A] perfect example of a memoir that entrances me."—Katherine A. Powers,
Boston Sunday Globe
"[O]ne of the few [biographers] who can convey what makes ordinary as well as extraordinary mortals live in our minds."—
Los Angeles Times


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