Good Show
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Sir David Attenborough has has a hugely successful life by any standards. He has produced pioneering television, achieved high office at the BBC, is recognised as highly influential in his chosen field, has written numerous books, has been knighted, is instantly recognisable, has travelled extensively doing work he obviously loves.
It must have been difficult for him to decide how to start this book, an autobiography of his working life; How about opening it by describing the day he was knighted? Or the time he commissioned "Match of the Day", still going strong today? Or the moment he laughed as young Mountain Gorillas played around him, an image that entered the national consciousness when broadcast as part of the ground-breaking "Life On Earth"? No, cleverly he starts with an episode just before he entered the world of the media; we find him clock-watching in a boring job he feels unsuited for. We can appreciate his many successes and triumphs all the more by being shown that they did not magically occur.Sir David is an ordinary mortal, and this short opening passage reminds us of this.
Actually, the vast bulk of this book is purely about his broacasting career, and there are precious few passages such as the clock-watching opening one that do not directly relate to this career.
Personally, I must admit to finding this rather a shame. I enjoyed reading about his childhood fossil museum and his catching the slow train to Nottingham University. Such personal moments are very rare, even his famous film directing brother is only mentioned once, and then only in passing...surely it must have been useful to have such a relative? How did Sir David feel when viewing "Jurassic Park"?
This work is too well mannered to reveal such things, and probably our author is too well bred. In a world of celebrity soul-baring, this attitude is laudable. In a similar way, Sir David underplays his many successes and is slow to blow his own trumpet.
The final chapters, perhaps, fail to sum up as clear and strong message for conservation as perhaps they might, but the author's love of the natural world more than makes up for this. As his closing comments on continuing in TV make clear, " I was in my mid-seventies...I would rather do that than sit at home by myself..." these are the memoirs of an old man, looking back on a full life. The fire in his belly may have gone out a little, but his courtesy , charm and good sense never waver.
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Inspirational
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David Attenborough is one of my all time heroes, so how could I fail to enjoy it? He has lived the most exciting, extraordinary and amazing life, and done so many things that I could only dream of. It was one of the easiest reads I have had in a long, long time and simply fascinating to read about the changes in attitudes in zoology over the last 50 years, not to forget his time as an early pioneer of TV.
Read it.
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Sir Dave. Can i adopt you as my uncle?
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Utterly brilliant. Sir Dave could well be the most interesting Briton of the last 100 years. The mans life has been extraordinary. This book is a history of the BBC and a reminder we should be as proud of it as anything else produced by this country. It's a travelogue of exotic far off countries and the endearing diary of a true gent on a boys own adventure. One of the most amazing things about his life is the way he has always adapted to change.
And weaved throughout the book is great piece of natural history, as i read it i could picture scenes from one of his many series.
Please Sir Dave. Adopt me.
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A remarkable book about a remarkable man.
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This is a fascinating account of David Attenboroughs career with the BBC. It is intrigueing to read of the behind the camara stories to some of his most memorable scenes and documentaries, as well as learning more about the countries he's visited and the life he's lead. This comes highly recommended.
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Surprisingly absorbing
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I don't normally go in for celebrity (auto)biographies, but I picked this up on holiday as it was the best thing on offer, and found it was surprisingly absorbing! There may've been a more recent edition than the one I read, which terminated just after his wife's death, and so misses some of Attenborough's more recent work, such as the Blue Planet series, but covers all of his television career up to that point. Despite being an autobiography, Attenborough does his best not just to describe what many people will have seen of his work on television. There are many amusing anecdotes to be found, and the tales of his adventurers around the world really are quite special, since so much his changed in the intervening years (indeed his experience of Komodo Island before and after is one perfect example). There's also quite an insight to be had into the workings of the BBC, and Attenborough's supporting stance is quite plain (one particular encounter he had with the chairman of ITV springs to mind). All in all, a mixed bag. It suffers all the pitfalls common to autobiographical works, in my opinion, but his travels and experiences have been interesting enough to warrant it worth the read.
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