Dadland

Author:   Keggie Carew
Publisher:   Black Cat
ISBN:  

9780802125149


Pages:   432
Publication Date:   07 March 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Dadland


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Overview

"Winner of the Costa Book Award for Biography Keggie Carew grew up in the gravitational field of an unorthodox father who lived on his wits and dazzling charm. For most of her adult life, Keggie was kept at arm's length from her father's personal history, but when she is invited to join him for the sixtieth anniversary of the Jedburghs--an elite special operations unit that was the first collaboration between the American and British Secret Services during World War II--a new door opens in their relationship. As dementia stakes a claim over his memory, Keggie embarks on a quest to unravel her father's story, and soon finds herself in a far more consuming place than she had bargained for. Tom Carew was a maverick, a left-handed stutterer, a law unto himself. As a Jedburgh he was parachuted behind enemy lines to raise guerrilla resistance first against the Germans in France, then against the Japanese in Southeast Asia, where he won the moniker ""Lawrence of Burma."" But his wartime exploits are only the beginning. Part family memoir, part energetic military history, Dadland takes us on a spellbinding journey, in peace and war, into surprising and shady corners of twentieth-century politics, her rackety English childhood, the poignant breakdown of her family, the corridors of dementia and beyond. As Keggie pieces her father--and herself--back together again, she celebrates the technicolor life of an impossible, irresistible, unstoppable man."

Full Product Details

Author:   Keggie Carew
Publisher:   Black Cat
Imprint:   Black Cat
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 22.60cm
Weight:   0.662kg
ISBN:  

9780802125149


ISBN 10:   080212514
Pages:   432
Publication Date:   07 March 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

<b>Praise for <i>Dadland</i> </b> <b>Shortlisted for the Costa Book Award for Biography</b> #1 nonfiction bestseller in the UK</b> Oh this book. Beautiful and fierce and brave. Memory and war and family and loss and, well, wow. <b> Helen Macdonald, author of <i>H Is For Hawk</i></b> A bravura tale of derring-do stylish, unconventional, and utterly hilarious. <b> Costa Biography Award judges</b> Celebrated as 'Lawrence of Burma' and 'the Mad Irishman, ' Carew was the youngest officer ever to be awarded a Distinguished Service Order . . . This chiaroscuro of dad-as-hero and dad-in-decline patterns a book which is as much about love and family as allies v axis . . . It s a book about a singular man. Even near the end of his life, Tom managed to charm and astonish . . . [An] original, moving book. <b><i>Guardian</i> (UK)</b> Energetic. . . Carew s vivid narrative takes readers briskly through the horrors and excitement of war, portraying Tom as a vigorous, charismatic soldier fully in his element . . . Carew s evocative blend of biography and memoir maintains a warmly clear-eyed tone while taking the full measure of dysfunctional and disappointed lives . . . A scintillating portrait of Britain s Greatest Generation at war and uneasy peace. <b> <i>Publishers Weekly</i> (starred review)</b> One of the most vivid books I have ever read about the cut and thrust of family life, its best of times and its worst of times . . . A rich and stunning achievement, a feat of imagination that sews together many parallel true stories. Above all, it is a labour of shining daughterly love. <b><i>Sunday Express</i> (UK)</b> A fascinating mix of military history and family memoir. <b><i>Times</i> (UK)</b> Dazzling . . . An unforgettable portrait of a maverick father who is in the process of forgetting everything, including the exploits for which he was awarded a Croix de Guerre. But it s so much more besides: a detective story, a family history, a thrilling tale of derring-do, and the most distinctive and affecting memoir I ve read since <i>H Is for Hawk</i>. <b><i>Bookseller</i> (UK), Book of the Month </b> A clear-eyed portrait of a man caught in the vortex of his own enigma. <b> Costa Book Awards shortlist citation</b>BR> <i>Dadland</i> is part family memoir, part history book, and is compelling and moving from start to finish . . . [Keggie Carew] hasn t just uncovered the facts about her father s war; she s inhabited it imaginatively with him, for him, and has recorded it vividly as his own grip on memory wavers and fails . . . Carew s funny, fascinating and unflinching tribute to her father is a portrait of a complex man: not just a war hero but a flawed husband; not just a Jedburgh but her incorrigible and much-missed dad. <b><i>Financial Times</i></b> An astonishing biography . . . <i>Dadland</i> mixes intimate memoir, biography, history and detective story: this is a shape-shifting hybrid that meditates on the nature of time and identity . . . Tom Carew was a razzle-dazzle character, larger than life and anarchically self-invented . . . For all its vigour and comic zest, <i>Dadland</i> is a careful and tender discovery that patiently circles around a man who spent his life mythologizing and running away from himself. <b><i>Observer</i> (UK)</b> Outstandingly good. <b><i>Esquire</i> (UK)</b> A moving memoir-cum-biography. <b><i>Irish Times</i> (UK)</b> An intoxicating blend of history, memoir and biography. <b>BBC Radio Bristol</b> In <i>Dadland</i>, [Keggie Carew] tells [her father s] story . . . with poignancy and humour. <b><i>Vogue</i> (UK)</b> How lovely to discover a book that makes one seize friends by the lapels and implore them, Read this . . . On one level, Keggie Carew s <i>Dadland</i> is a wartime adventure story. On another, it is an investigative memoir, a history of how one family s fortunes can be sunk. But above all it is a portrait of a loveable, charming, mischievous old rascal named Tom Carew . . . [A] wonderful book. <b><i>Literary Review</i> (UK)</b> I was so absorbed and moved by <i>Dadland</i> I haven t been able to read anything else. It is beautifully writtendeft and funny and so tenderbut I have also come away knowing more about history, more about dementia, more about men, more about daughters, more about love, family, sheds, diaries, an inquisitive mind and peeing in plastic bottles. I loved it. <b>Rachel Joyce, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry</i></b> I loved <i>Dadland</i> for its tenderness, humour and candour . . . It has also taught me something deeply moving about tolerance, and about love. <b>Robert Macfarlane, author of <i>The Old Ways</i></b> <i>Dadland</i> is a wonderful, haunting and beautifully written memoir unlike any other I have ever read . . . It is a profoundly rewarding and life-affirming book of many layers and a deeply moving homage to that extraordinary generation who lived, loved and fought through the Second World War. An absolutely stunning book. <b>James Holland, author of <i>The Rise of Germany, 1939-1941</i></b>


Praise for Dadland #1 nonfiction bestseller in the UK Celebrated as 'Lawrence of Burma' and 'the Mad Irishman, ' Carew was the youngest officer ever to be awarded a Distinguished Service Order . . . This chiaroscuro of dad-as-hero and dad-in-decline patterns a book which is as much about love and family as allies v axis . . . It s a book about a singular man. Even near the end of his life, Tom managed to charm and astonish . . . [An] original, moving book. Guardian (UK) One of the most vivid books I have ever read about the cut and thrust of family life, its best of times and its worst of times . . . A rich and stunning achievement, a feat of imagination that sews together many parallel true stories. Above all, it is a labour of shining daughterly love. Sunday Express (UK) Dadland is part family memoir, part history book, and is compelling and moving from start to finish . . . [Keggie Carew] hasn t just uncovered the facts about her father s war; she s inhabited it imaginatively with him, for him, and has recorded it vividly as his own grip on memory wavers and fails . . . Carew s funny, fascinating and unflinching tribute to her father is a portrait of a complex man: not just a war hero but a flawed husband; not just a Jedburgh but her incorrigible and much-missed dad. Financial Times Read enough memoirs and you ll see authors claim triumph and tragedy by plastering pathos like troweled-on makeup. None of that here, Carew underplays almost everything, letting her stories do the work and zipping easily between times and timelines. The facts are golden (cameos from fake SAS men, CIA directors, quasi-evil stepmothers) but from them she could not have made something more outstandingly good. Esquire (UK) An astonishing biography . . . Dadland mixes intimate memoir, biography, history and detective story: this is a shape-shifting hybrid that meditates on the nature of time and identity . . . Tom Carew was a razzle-dazzle character, larger than life and anarchically self-invented . . . For all its vigour and comic zest, Dadland is a careful and tender discovery that patiently circles around a man who spent his life mythologizing and running away from himself. Observer (UK) A fascinating mix of military history and family memoir. Times (UK) Dazzling . . . An unforgettable portrait of a maverick father who is in the process of forgetting everything, including the exploits for which he was awarded a Croix de Guerre. But it s so much more besides: a detective story, a family history, a thrilling tale of derring-do, and the most distinctive and affecting memoir I ve read since H Is for Hawk. Bookseller (UK), Book of the Month In Dadland, [Keggie Carew] tells [her father s] story . . . with poignancy and humour. Vogue (UK) How lovely to discover a book that makes one seize friends by the lapels and implore them, Read this . . . On one level, Keggie Carew s Dadland is a wartime adventure story. On another, it is an investigative memoir, a history of how one family s fortunes can be sunk. But above all it is a portrait of a loveable, charming, mischievous old rascal named Tom Carew . . . [A] wonderful book. Literary Review (UK) I was so absorbed and moved by Dadland I haven t been able to read anything else. It is beautifully writtendeft and funny and so tenderbut I have also come away knowing more about history, more about dementia, more about men, more about daughters, more about love, family, sheds, diaries, an inquisitive mind and peeing in plastic bottles. I loved it. Rachel Joyce, New York Times bestselling author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry I loved Dadland for its tenderness, humour and candour . . . It has also taught me something deeply moving about tolerance, and about love. Robert Macfarlane, author of The Old Ways Dadland is a wonderful, haunting and beautifully written memoir unlike any other I have ever read . . . It is a profoundly rewarding and life-affirming book of many layers and a deeply moving homage to that extraordinary generation who lived, loved and fought through the Second World War. An absolutely stunning book. James Holland, author of The Rise of Germany, 1939-1941


Praise for Dadland Winner of the Costa Book Award for Biography #1 nonfiction bestseller in the UK An Amazon Best Book of the Month in Biographies & Memoirs Oh this book. Beautiful and fierce and brave. Memory and war and family and loss and, well, wow. --Helen Macdonald, author of H Is For Hawk Keggie Carew dives deep into her father's world in this extraordinary blend of personal memoir, biography, and World War II military history . . . Dadland brings to mind Helen MacDonald's H is for Hawk in the way it soars off in surprising directions, teaches you things you didn't know, and ambushes your emotions. It's a similarly fierce and unconventional book that defies categorization to explore mortality, loss, life decisions and influences through a daughter's intense bond with her father. --Heller McAlpin, NPR.org [A] superb book. --Sunday Times (UK) A very moving story, very mature, very visual book. A stand out, standalone piece of work because it was so unusual. For me it had the magic ingredient: It had beautiful prose, beautiful, smooth, readable, accessible prose and it was utterly hilarious. The most unconventional biography I have ever read. --Mary Loudon, Judge of Costa Award for Biography 2016 An astonishingly moving story: how, as she slowly lost her father to dementia, a writer pieced together the awesome truth about his recklessly daring wartime exploits behind enemy lines. --Daily Mail (UK) Part military history and part personal memoir . . . It's an exorcism, ghost-hunt, and swim through the archipelago of her father's shattered self . . . The shuttle between multiple timeframes and voices suits a character as vivid and layered as Tom Carew: a master of deception, a fearless charmer more at ease in war than in peacetime, impervious to pain. --Times Literary Supplement (UK) We all adored this hilarious and heartbreaking book--you'll be so glad you read it. --Costa Biography Award judges Celebrated as 'Lawrence of Burma' and 'the Mad Irishman, ' Carew was the youngest officer ever to be awarded a Distinguished Service Order . . . This chiaroscuro of dad-as-hero and dad-in-decline patterns a book which is as much about love and family as allies v axis . . . It's a book about a singular man. Even near the end of his life, Tom managed to charm and astonish . . . [An] original, moving book. --Guardian (UK) Dadland is a rare amalgam: It's a memoir of the days her father Tom Carew spent as one of the dashing, daring 'Jedburghs' during World War II . . . The author pieces together a joint memoir/biography that tugs at the heartstrings even as it describes real feats of bravery, such as Tom's parachuting into Occupied France with a tiny team to defy Nazis, and his incredible work in trying to maintain a free Burma. --Literary Hub, 14 Books to Read This March Energetic. . . Carew's vivid narrative takes readers briskly through the horrors and excitement of war, portraying Tom as a vigorous, charismatic soldier fully in his element . . . Carew's evocative blend of biography and memoir maintains a warmly clear-eyed tone while taking the full measure of dysfunctional and disappointed lives . . . A scintillating portrait of Britain's Greatest Generation at war and uneasy peace. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) One of the most vivid books I have ever read about the cut and thrust of family life, its best of times and its worst of times . . . A rich and stunning achievement, a feat of imagination that sews together many parallel true stories. Above all, it is a labour of shining daughterly love. --Sunday Express (UK) Dazzling . . . An unforgettable portrait of a maverick father who is in the process of forgetting everything, including the exploits for which he was awarded a Croix de Guerre. But it's so much more besides: a detective story, a family history, a thrilling tale of derring-do, and the most distinctive and affecting memoir I've read since H Is for Hawk. --Bookseller (UK), Book of the Month A clear-eyed portrait of a man caught in the vortex of his own enigma. --Costa Book Awards shortlist citationBR> Dadland is part family memoir, part history book, and is compelling and moving from start to finish . . . [Keggie Carew] hasn't just uncovered the facts about her father's war; she's inhabited it imaginatively with him, for him, and has recorded it vividly as his own grip on memory wavers and fails . . . Carew's funny, fascinating and unflinching tribute to her father is a portrait of a complex man: not just a war hero but a flawed husband; not just a Jedburgh but her incorrigible and much-missed dad. --Financial Times An astonishing biography . . . Dadland mixes intimate memoir, biography, history and detective story: this is a shape-shifting hybrid that meditates on the nature of time and identity . . . Tom Carew was a razzle-dazzle character, larger than life and anarchically self-invented . . . For all its vigour and comic zest, Dadland is a careful and tender discovery that patiently circles around a man who spent his life mythologizing and running away from himself. --Observer (UK) Outstandingly good. --Esquire (UK) Moving . . . Dadland is a poignant look at a child's changing perspective on her father's life, a journey many children take as their parents grow older. --BookPage A moving memoir-cum-biography. --Irish Times (UK) An intoxicating blend of history, memoir and biography. --BBC Radio Bristol In Dadland, [Keggie Carew] tells [her father's] story . . . with poignancy and humour. --Vogue (UK) How lovely to discover a book that makes one seize friends by the lapels and implore them, 'Read this' . . . On one level, Keggie Carew's Dadland is a wartime adventure story. On another, it is an investigative memoir, a history of how one family's fortunes can be sunk. But above all it is a portrait of a loveable, charming, mischievous old rascal named Tom Carew . . . [A] wonderful book. --Literary Review (UK) I was so absorbed and moved by Dadland I haven't been able to read anything else. It is beautifully written--deft and funny and so tender--but I have also come away knowing more about history, more about dementia, more about men, more about daughters, more about love, family, sheds, diaries, an inquisitive mind and peeing in plastic bottles. I loved it. --Rachel Joyce, New York Times bestselling author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry I loved Dadland for its tenderness, humour and candour . . . It has also taught me something deeply moving about tolerance, and about love. --Robert Macfarlane, author of The Old Ways Dadland is a wonderful, haunting and beautifully written memoir unlike any other I have ever read . . . It is a profoundly rewarding and life-affirming book of many layers and a deeply moving homage to that extraordinary generation who lived, loved and fought through the Second World War. An absolutely stunning book. --James Holland, author of The Rise of Germany, 1939-1941 Praise for Dadland Winner of the Costa Book Award for Biography #1 nonfiction bestseller in the UK An Amazon Best Book of the Month in Biographies & Memoirs -Oh this book. Beautiful and fierce and brave. Memory and war and family and loss and, well, wow.---Helen Macdonald, author of H Is For Hawk -Keggie Carew dives deep into her father's world in this extraordinary blend of personal memoir, biography, and World War II military history . . . Dadland brings to mind Helen MacDonald's H is for Hawk in the way it soars off in surprising directions, teaches you things you didn't know, and ambushes your emotions. It's a similarly fierce and unconventional book that defies categorization to explore mortality, loss, life decisions and influences through a daughter's intense bond with her father.---Heller McAlpin, NPR.org -[A] superb book.---Sunday Times (UK) -An astonishingly moving story: how, as she slowly lost her father to dementia, a writer pieced together the awesome truth about his recklessly daring wartime exploits behind enemy lines.---Daily Mail (UK) -Part military history and part personal memoir . . . It's an exorcism, ghost-hunt, and swim through the archipelago of her father's shattered self . . . The shuttle between multiple timeframes and voices suits a character as vivid and layered as Tom Carew: a master of deception, a fearless charmer more at ease in war than in peacetime, impervious to pain.---Times Literary Supplement (UK) -We all adored this hilarious and heartbreaking book--you'll be so glad you read it.---Costa Biography Award judges -Celebrated as 'Lawrence of Burma' and 'the Mad Irishman, ' Carew was the youngest officer ever to be awarded a Distinguished Service Order . . . This chiaroscuro of dad-as-hero and dad-in-decline patterns a book which is as much about love and family as allies v axis . . . It's a book about a singular man. Even near the end of his life, Tom managed to charm and astonish . . . [An] original, moving book.---Guardian (UK) -Dadland is a rare amalgam: It's a memoir of the days her father Tom Carew spent as one of the dashing, daring 'Jedburghs' during World War II . . . The author pieces together a joint memoir/biography that tugs at the heartstrings even as it describes real feats of bravery, such as Tom's parachuting into Occupied France with a tiny team to defy Nazis, and his incredible work in trying to maintain a free Burma.---Literary Hub, -14 Books to Read This March- -Energetic. . . Carew's vivid narrative takes readers briskly through the horrors and excitement of war, portraying Tom as a vigorous, charismatic soldier fully in his element . . . Carew's evocative blend of biography and memoir maintains a warmly clear-eyed tone while taking the full measure of dysfunctional and disappointed lives . . . A scintillating portrait of Britain's Greatest Generation at war and uneasy peace.---Publishers Weekly (starred review) -One of the most vivid books I have ever read about the cut and thrust of family life, its best of times and its worst of times . . . A rich and stunning achievement, a feat of imagination that sews together many parallel true stories. Above all, it is a labour of shining daughterly love.---Sunday Express (UK) -Dazzling . . . An unforgettable portrait of a maverick father who is in the process of forgetting everything, including the exploits for which he was awarded a Croix de Guerre. But it's so much more besides: a detective story, a family history, a thrilling tale of derring-do, and the most distinctive and affecting memoir I've read since H Is for Hawk.---Bookseller (UK), -Book of the Month- -A clear-eyed portrait of a man caught in the vortex of his own enigma.---Costa Book Awards shortlist citationBR>-Dadland is part family memoir, part history book, and is compelling and moving from start to finish . . . [Keggie Carew] hasn't just uncovered the facts about her father's war; she's inhabited it imaginatively with him, for him, and has recorded it vividly as his own grip on memory wavers and fails . . . Carew's funny, fascinating and unflinching tribute to her father is a portrait of a complex man: not just a war hero but a flawed husband; not just a Jedburgh but her incorrigible and much-missed dad.---Financial Times -An astonishing biography . . . Dadland mixes intimate memoir, biography, history and detective story: this is a shape-shifting hybrid that meditates on the nature of time and identity . . . Tom Carew was a razzle-dazzle character, larger than life and anarchically self-invented . . . For all its vigour and comic zest, Dadland is a careful and tender discovery that patiently circles around a man who spent his life mythologizing and running away from himself.---Observer (UK) -Outstandingly good.---Esquire (UK) -Moving . . . Dadland is a poignant look at a child's changing perspective on her father's life, a journey many children take as their parents grow older.---BookPage -A moving memoir-cum-biography.---Irish Times (UK) -An intoxicating blend of history, memoir and biography.---BBC Radio Bristol -In Dadland, [Keggie Carew] tells [her father's] story . . . with poignancy and humour.---Vogue (UK) -How lovely to discover a book that makes one seize friends by the lapels and implore them, 'Read this' . . . On one level, Keggie Carew's Dadland is a wartime adventure story. On another, it is an investigative memoir, a history of how one family's fortunes can be sunk. But above all it is a portrait of a loveable, charming, mischievous old rascal named Tom Carew . . . [A] wonderful book.---Literary Review (UK) -I was so absorbed and moved by Dadland I haven't been able to read anything else. It is beautifully written--deft and funny and so tender--but I have also come away knowing more about history, more about dementia, more about men, more about daughters, more about love, family, sheds, diaries, an inquisitive mind and peeing in plastic bottles. I loved it.---Rachel Joyce, New York Times bestselling author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry -I loved Dadland for its tenderness, humour and candour . . . It has also taught me something deeply moving about tolerance, and about love.---Robert Macfarlane, author of The Old Ways -Dadland is a wonderful, haunting and beautifully written memoir unlike any other I have ever read . . . It is a profoundly rewarding and life-affirming book of many layers and a deeply moving homage to that extraordinary generation who lived, loved and fought through the Second World War. An absolutely stunning book.---James Holland, author of The Rise of Germany, 1939-1941


Author Information

Keggie Carew has lived in London, West Cork, Barcelona, Texas, and New Zealand. Before writing, her career was in contemporary art. She has studied English Literature at Goldsmiths, run an alternative art space called JAGO, and opened a pop-up shop in London called theworldthewayiwantit. She lives near Salisbury, in the UK.

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