What will you remember if you live to be 100? Diana Athill charmed readers with her prize-winning memoir Somewhere Towards the End , which transformed her into an unexpected literary star.
Athill reminds us of the joy and richness of every stage of life--and what it means to live life fully, without regrets..
A pure joy to read, Alive, Alive Oh sparkles with wise and often very funny reflections on the condition of being old.
As her vivid, textured memories range across the decades, she relates with unflinching candor her harrowing experience as an expectant mOther in her forties and crafts unforgettable portraits of friends, writers, and lovers.
In warm, engaging prose she describes the bucolic pleasures of her grandmother\'s garden and the wonders of traveling as a young woman in Europe after the end of the Second World War.
My two valuable lessons are: avoid romanticism and abhor possessiveness, she writes.
Writing from her cozy room in Highgate, London, Diana begins to reflect on the Things That Matter after a lifetime of remarkable experiences, and the memories That have risen to the surface and sustain her in her very old age.
Now, on the eve of her ninety-eighth birthday, Athill has written a sequel every bit as unsentimental, candid, and beguiling as her most beloved work.
What will you remember if you live to be 100? Diana Athill charmed readers with her prize-winning memoir Somewhere Towards the End , which transformed her into an unexpected literary star