Sixty Years Young (Paperback)


Erudite and sensitive, author Michel Robin has earned the wisdom that worldly experience of six decades confers on a reflective man. But in Sixty Years Young, he goes back through time to confront the child that he was and to embrace the ways in which that boy is still who he is now. In the tradition of philosophers' and poets' courageous childhood confessionals, yet with an honesty and clarity all his own, he gives us a real narrative of childhood seen through un-tinted glasses. Revisiting his boyhood becomes a quest for truth. The truth of the man he has become. The wider truth of the world as the boy saw it, the world that grew up around him. The tales of his truths make for episodes at times delightful, at times embarrassing, and always incisive. This is no safe stroll down Memory Lane. The author relives the beauty and tyranny of being a child. Young Michel commands fairness into his universe with toy soldiers shared with the neighbor boy across the fence of social divide. He lights matches to the housecat's whiskers. He pursues his first love with a barrage of letters, and gets punished by the school priest. He parries adult intervention with subterfuge or flashes of contrition. Older Michel dissects his world - our world - with the keen intransigence of the boy. It's a dialogue between two selves. A protest against malice and hypocrisy. A hand held out for love. An ode to life. It's also an evocation of Belgium in the post-war years. There are tensions among family members around issues of class and religion. Puritanism contends with fascination for movies, fast cars, beautiful girls. People, events, beliefs all loom into the lens, held in the same lucid gaze, by the boy and by the man that boy has become. As if yesterday was still today.

R427

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles4270
Delivery AdviceShips in 10 - 15 working days


Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Donate to Against Period Poverty


Product Description

Erudite and sensitive, author Michel Robin has earned the wisdom that worldly experience of six decades confers on a reflective man. But in Sixty Years Young, he goes back through time to confront the child that he was and to embrace the ways in which that boy is still who he is now. In the tradition of philosophers' and poets' courageous childhood confessionals, yet with an honesty and clarity all his own, he gives us a real narrative of childhood seen through un-tinted glasses. Revisiting his boyhood becomes a quest for truth. The truth of the man he has become. The wider truth of the world as the boy saw it, the world that grew up around him. The tales of his truths make for episodes at times delightful, at times embarrassing, and always incisive. This is no safe stroll down Memory Lane. The author relives the beauty and tyranny of being a child. Young Michel commands fairness into his universe with toy soldiers shared with the neighbor boy across the fence of social divide. He lights matches to the housecat's whiskers. He pursues his first love with a barrage of letters, and gets punished by the school priest. He parries adult intervention with subterfuge or flashes of contrition. Older Michel dissects his world - our world - with the keen intransigence of the boy. It's a dialogue between two selves. A protest against malice and hypocrisy. A hand held out for love. An ode to life. It's also an evocation of Belgium in the post-war years. There are tensions among family members around issues of class and religion. Puritanism contends with fascination for movies, fast cars, beautiful girls. People, events, beliefs all loom into the lens, held in the same lucid gaze, by the boy and by the man that boy has become. As if yesterday was still today.

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Edition Quintessencia

Country of origin

United States

Release date

February 2014

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

February 2014

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 12mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

230

ISBN-13

978-0-9914780-3-3

Barcode

9780991478033

Categories

LSN

0-9914780-3-7



Trending On Loot