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Miles Gone By

A Literary Autobiography

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In this autobiography, woven from personal pieces composed over the course of a celebrated writing life of more than fifty years, you'll meet William Buckley the boy, growing up in a family of ten children; Buckley the political enfant terrible, whose debut book, God and Man at Yale, was a New York Times best-seller; Buckley the editor of the National Review, hailed as the founder of the modern conservative movement; Buckley the family man; Buckley the spy and novelist of spies; and Buckley the bon vivant. You'll also meet Buckley's friends: Ronald Reagan, Henry Kissinger, Clare Boothe Luce, Tom Wolfe, David Niven, and many others.

Along the way, listeners will be treated to Buckley's romance with wine, his love of the right word, his intoxication with music, and his joy in skiing and travel.

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Instead of a traditional memoir, William F. Buckley, Jr., assembled a collection of writings in which, he says, "I figure directly." That ranges from childhood reminiscences to a novel excerpt that represents his wartime experience, all narrated in Buckley's familiar erudite style. Most fascinating are heartfelt accounts of his friendships with former Communist spy Whittaker Chambers and liberal writer Murray Kempton, as well as a rollicking account of his New York mayoral run. He also shares interesting stories about his admiration for his son, Christopher's, literary career, skiing, sailing, and his wine cellar. Although there are a few slow spots--most notably a section on "God and Man at Yale"--Buckley reads his own essays with a wit and joy worthy of listeners' attention. J.A.S. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 21, 2004
      The conservative writer and Firing Line
      host has published so many millions of words in five decades of polemics and public musing that amassing a sort of autobiography required little more than sandwiching a selection of 50 essays between a brief preface and epilogue. The extracts range in subject from his silver-spoon boyhood and boarding-school days to the lives and deaths of the many prominent people he has known. Fame came early, with Buckley's 1951 God and Man at Yale
      , excerpted here, which lambasted liberal bias at elite American colleges. (Far superior, though, is the sparkling memoir of his war-veteran class of 1950 at Yale.) An instant darling of conservatives who needed a spirited new voice, Buckley founded the National Review
      , whose writers became the core of his widening circle of influential acquaintances. While sailing, touring and media punditry take up much of the collection, the most memorable pieces are about such offbeat friends as the tragic Whittaker Chambers. Nevertheless, some portraits are merely laudatory epitaphs. Approaching 80, Buckley notes that his sporting days are about over, but "o to speak, I can still ski on a keyboard." Like skiing, his keyboard has its ups and downs. B&w photos. Agent, Lois Wallace.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Text Difficulty:9-12

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