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4 Reviews
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Read,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives (Paperback)
This book is wonderful. I let my art professor borrow this book and she went out and bought a copy for herself. But, not before taking time before a lecture to thank me for introducing her to this work. Most people have never heard of these men but they are fascinating and tragic. One becomes an artist after being stricken with polio. He displays talent and Picasso and Cocteau praise him. He works frantically but becomes frustrated and perhaps displays symptons of schizophrenia. His very death is a mystery, maybe he was pushed or jumped in front of an oncoming train. The second is different from the other two by his arrogance and personality. He is a pilot during WWII. Soon, he becomes the last surviving pilot of his outfit and against warnings and advice flies again, crashes and dies. He was horribly burned in a previous plane crash, which kept him from flying for a while, that changes everything for him. That's a given but he was a big flirt and used to getting women easily charmed. He even had an affair with a Hollywood movie actress. She starred opposite of Laurence Olivier in Wuthering Heights-Merle Oberon. The third and final man in this book is to me the most tragic. He is a man of complete brillance and very bright in everything he does. He flies through school with humor, charm, and by his intelligence. His teachers complain that he breezes through his education far too easily but brillantly. His sexuality poses a problem at a time when it was outlawed in Britain. His father is a sort of senator who loves his son, but there is conflict because of this law. He falls into alcoholism perhaps because of boredom. Even though intelligent in all subjects he has no one outstanding favorite subject, let's say. He becomes a journalist and gets tangled with the KGB and British intelligence and eventually CIA. At a certain point, he marries, which surprises all his friends, and talks of having children but dies mysteriously. The woman he married, he used to associate with in Russia during his stay as a reporter. Faulks engages you with his research and facts and doesn't really elaborate and digress. So, the life story of each man doesn't become murky unless he is going over a murky period of the men's lives. Each biography is told separately and like an essay comes together satisfactorily in the end. A sort of guilt comes over while reading and looking at the pictures though. It's as if someone could have tried harder for each or it makes you think about people in your life and wonder about them. Very good but I didn't like Faulk's book Birdsong. Mentioning that because I bought it after adoring this book.
6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Fatal Englishman : Three Short Lives,
By Murray (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Fatal Englishman (Hardcover)
This book is definitely worth the read. It traces the lives of 3 individuals. All live life to the full, with passion and ambition. What they have in common is not only their passion and ambition in life but that they all die young. It is an inspiring read to see what they overcame and accomplished in their quest for happiness and perfection in their life space. Read it.
1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives (Paperback)
As the sub-title indicates, 'The Fatal Englishman" traces the relatively short lives of 3 Englishmen. Painter Christopher Wood; WW2 fighter pilot Richard Hillary and foreign correspondent Jeremy Wolfenden. They are all fairly well-known from other sources and why Faulks chose this particular trio is not clear.
I only bought 'The Fatal Englishman' because I'd enjoyed a couple of others by Faulks - particularly 'Birdsong', but I did not finish this book. I did not find the lives or stories of any of these men particularly interesting. Those that do would be better-off reading their individual biographies than this book.
1 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives,
By
This review is from: The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives (Paperback)
I didn't like the book. I didn't even finish it. I had just read "Birdsong", a fiction book of Sebastian Faulks, and I expected this to be a good book. However, I found it very dry and uninteresting. I also ordered two other books by Faulks. I have started one, and already it is extremely interesting. So, perhaps it is just that I don't like non-fiction and that I didn't know the subjects of the stories. It was well written, but I just couldn't get interested.
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The Fatal Englishman : Three Short Lives by Sebastian Faulks (Paperback - 1997)
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