Swan River (PB)

Swan River (PB)

by David Reynolds (Author), David Reynolds (Author)

Synopsis

'A beautiful meditation on the nature of families, on the way that feelings are passed on almost imperceptibly from generation to generation' - "Independent'. "Swan River" is a lovingly crafted story about love, truth and searching, and David Reynolds is a writer of calm, quite brilliance' - "Daily Express". Sis - as David Reynolds' grandmother was always called - was a passionate and headstrong young woman. Having betrayed herself by falling in love too trustingly, she added to her own unhappiness by marrying a man she did not love at all. Throughout his childhood and youth, David Reynolds kept an eye on the past, entranced by these family stories from Victorian London - the music halls, the romances, the strange disappearance of his grandfather - even as he himself came of age in the vibrant 1960s. In "Swan River", he describes both worlds with great vitality and sympathy, and shows how a child's puzzled interest in his forebears deepens into an adult's understanding of human nature. 'For me, David Reynold's memoir "Swan River" stood head and shoulders above every other book this year. It's nothing like the usual slab of autobiography...The material is crafted and shaped with the artistry that we would expect from our best fiction writers' - Jonathan Coe, Independent Books of the Year.

$3.86

Save:$5.01 (57%)

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Picador
Published: 08 Nov 2002

ISBN 10: 0330391976
ISBN 13: 9780330391979

Media Reviews
'A beautiful meditation on the nature of families, on the way that feelings are passed on almost imperceptibly from generation to generation' Independent 'Swan River is a lovingly crafted story about love, truth and searching, and David Reynolds is a writer of calm, quite brilliance' Daily Express
Author Bio
David Reynolds was born in London and grew up there and in Buckinghamshire. He was a trainee sub-editor on the underground magazine Oz and the editor of the National Secular Society's weekly newspaper, The Freethinker, before graduating as a mature student from the LSE. He worked in book publishing for many years and in 1986 was one of the founder of Bloomsbury Publishing, where he was Deputy Managing Director and Publishing Director (non-fiction) until he left in 1999 to concentrate on writing. He is married, lives in London and has three daughters.