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Try to Tell the Story: A Memoir
 
 
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Try to Tell the Story: A Memoir [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

David Thomson (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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More from David Thomson
Film critic Thomson gives cinephiles and film novices alike a comprehensive overview cinema with his encyclopedic knowledge of films, actors, and actresses. Visit Amazon's David Thomson Page.

Book Description

February 3, 2009
From one of our most celebrated film critics and historians now comes a beautifully written memoir about his first eighteen years, growing up as an only child in south London in the midforties and late fifties. Told with elegance and restraint, partly from the point of view of a child, partly from that of an adult, it is the story of a lonely, stammering boy cared for by a matriarchy of his mother, grandmother, and an upstairs tenant, Miss Davis, to which he adds an imaginary sister, Sally. At the heart of this story is David Thomson’s profound sadness at being abandoned by a cold and distant father who visits only on weekends and keeps, as Thomson later discovers, another household.

Thomson gives a vivid picture of London in the aftermath of the war, whether it is his grandmother bringing him to a street corner to see Churchill or the bombed-out houses that still smelled of acrid smoke where, though forbidden, he played. Movies became his great escape, and the worlds revealed in Henry V, Red River, The Third Man, and Citizen Kane were part of his rich imaginative life, one that gained him a scholarship to public and eventually film school. And though his father could never tell his son he loved him, he spent the first part of vacations with him and he came back most weekends, taking Thomson to everything from boxing to cricket matches. But as Thomson admits, “I am still, years after his death, bewildered and pained by my father, and trying to love him—or find his love for me.”

Try to Tell the Story is a haunting and unsentimental look at the fragility of family relationships, a memoir of growing up in the absence of a full-time father, with movies and sports heroes as one’s only touchstones.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Film historian and novelist Thomson (The New Biographical Dictionary of Film; Suspects) looks back at his childhood and teen years, beginning with hazy memories of frosty mornings, air-raid shelters in wartime London, fear of bombs and the evacuation of children to the countryside. When the war ended, boys played in bombed-out buildings where staircases stopped in midair: The living rooms were exposed to the night air, but sometimes suggested that the residents had just left for the moment, like stage sets waiting for the next act. An only child born in 1941, Thomson talked with an imaginary sister, Sally, as he progressed from reading comic books to listening to BBC dramatizations on the matchless medium of radio. Probing personal defeats and triumphs, he reflects on his four years of speech therapy: Stammering is a silly little thing. It won't kill you, but it'll change the course of your life. In the heart of this haunting, eloquent memoir, as might be expected, he gets rhapsodic when recalling the films that left an indelible impression on him: Red River, Meet Me in St. Louis, Citizen Kane, East of Eden. While following a film critic in the making, we also see the changing cultural landscape of the 1940s and 1950s through his eyes. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Thomson, one of the most erudite critics and historians of film working today, here recalls his mid-1940s and 1950s London childhood. Unsurprisingly, the love of cinema permeates every page. He evocatively describes the bleak conditions of life in the World War II–torn capital, in which he, an only child, played amid bombed-out buildings, oblivious to the debris; and he examines his complicated relationship with an emotionally distant father. He often discusses the austere conditions with gentle humor. For instance, he first discovered bananas by watching American movie stars slipping on their peels and then asking his grandmother, What’s that? The movies captivated him. The cinema and the grand palaces in which they were shown represented another world, much more vivid than life. As a child, he couldn’t separate the terms in America from in the movies; to his young mind, they were one and the same. Growing up, he liked westerns (especially Red River) and adventure films, but he admits, I would take anything. Later, he discovered the National Film Theatre, where he was introduced to the films of Ingmar Bergman, and decided to enroll at the fledgling London School of Film Technique—at the time the only such school in Britain—rather than Oxford, much to the disappointment of his teachers. Thoughtful, honest, and engrossing. --June Sawyers

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st Ed. edition (February 3, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375412131
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375412134
  • Product Dimensions: 5.9 x 1 x 8.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,479,643 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Movie madness, February 6, 2009
By 
John Joss (Los Altos, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Try to Tell the Story: A Memoir (Hardcover)
David Thomson's book should be read by anyone who cares for film because he has encyclopedic knowledge of the medium, based on the lifetime passion he describes so eloquently. It is a fitting companion to his 'Biographical Dictionary of Film,' which is also a vital compendium of information about actors (with a few singular omissions that, to me, remain inexplicable).
Thomson traces his childhood life in London's Streatham district during WWII and goes on to explain how his passion for sports, theatre and film arose. His anecdotal material is fascinating, for example in describing what it was like to go as a child to Chelsea soccer games with immense crowds of adults, and his views of Orson Welles and his time in London in 1955, but there are so many rich and revealing references that the reader will have to make these lovely discoveries for himself or herself.
The only singular error I found in his wartime descriptions was his inability to distinguish between the V1 'Buzz Bomb,' or 'Doodlebug,' a winged, unmanned device sent across the channel by the thousands whose burping motor cut out before it glided down to attack indiscriminately, and the V2 rocket, also an indiscriminate terror weapon, which arrived unannounced--yes, I, too was there at the time and saw these horrors close up (the V2's designer, Werner Von Braun, came to the US after WWII and headed the rocket systems essential to the space program).
The inner charm of the book is his surprising fictional character, his 'sister' Sally, who speaks 'her' mind candidly and doesn't give an inch to her actual, real-life brother David. With Thomson's skills and contacts, he should write her into a screenplay and get it produced so that we could all enjoy her. She's a keeper, potty mouth and all.
The singular omission from the book, which reduces my five-star rating to four stars, is the lack of an index that would have permitted the reader to find and follow up on the people he describes.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars I for one liked it., September 6, 2010
Lordy, I think I grow more ignorant by the day or is it by the book. I had no idea who Mr. Thomson was when I read this memoir and, unlike the other reviewers here, could care less if his history is not pin point accurate or if any of the other mud balls thrown at him would stick should I somehow get to know the gentleman. And, to bring Christopher Hitchens into the fray along with a bit of British bashing seems to be beyond the pale in critiquing a simple memoir.
Maybe I say all that because I am somewhat of a simple memoir writer myself. Besides giving us a unique glimpse of the times, I found the subtle and painful relationship between the narrator, his father and his mother superbly rendered. Perhaps the subtly eluded those looking to tar the writer for some sin he may be guilty of. The family trips to the soccer games reminded me so much of outings with my family at that age (even though his was stuffy British middle class and mine was American Hillbilly once removed) that I nearly cringed at times.
So, I don't suppose that the difference between one kind of bomb or rocket is too terribly significant in the face of one's hopes and dreams dying a slow death.

Michael D. Edwards, Author of the recently released "Royal Ryukian Blues" a memoir of Okinawa.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars personal essay, March 5, 2009
By 
Marsha Garland (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Try to Tell the Story: A Memoir (Hardcover)
I love personal essays and this book falls into that genre. My own life's experience is very similar so I can really and truly understand the author's story. Well written.
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