This month I'm nominating a memoir:
A Man's Got to Have a Hobby: Long Summers with my Dad by William McInnes
Amazon US - $10.99 |
Amazon UK - £4.49 |
Amazon CA - CDN$11.99 |
Amazon AU - AUD$11.99 |
Kobo US - USD$10.99 |
Kobo UK £4.49 |
Kobo CA - CAD$11.99 |
Kobo AU AUD$11.99
From
Goodreads:
Quote:
A tail-end baby boomer, William McInnes recalls summer holidays that seemed to go on forever, when he and his mates would walk down to fish in the bay, a time when the Aussie battler stood as the local Labor candidate and watched out for his mates, and a time when the whole family would rush into the lounge room to watch a new commercial on TV.
He writes about his father—a strong character who talks to the furniture, dances with William’s mother in the kitchen, and spends his free time fixing up the house and doing the best for his family. In William’s writing you can hear his father speaking, listen to his mother singing, and his sisters and brothers talking in the yard.
This is a book about people who aren’t famous but should be. It’s about cane toads and families, love and hope and fear, laughter, death and life. Most of all, it is a realistic, down-to-earth book by a man who had a great time growing up. His warmth and humour come through on every page.
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If you know William McInnes from his appearance in various television series (I was never a fan of
Blue Healers, but I thought he was great in
Seachange) then you will recognise his voice in the writing. I considered putting up his fiction story
Cricket Kings as competition to the baseball nomination, but this memoir - I think - is a better work. If you're interested in trying some Australiana and getting a feel for an Australian summer, this book is a very good read.