
Bringing the House Down
A Family Memoir
$28.73
- Paperback
304 pages
- Release Date
9 August 2007
Summary
David Profumo was just seven when his father, who had been Secretary of State for War, resigned from the Macmillan government. Despite the furore and humiliation that followed, his parents famously stayed together - and now, forty years on, their son has written this long-awaited account of their family life before, during and after the sensational events of 1963.
Drawing on diaries, letters and other memorabilia never before made public, Bringing The House Down describes their backgr…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780719566097 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0719566096 |
| Author: | David Profumo |
| Publisher: | John Murray Press |
| Imprint: | John Murray Publishers Ltd |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 304 |
| Release Date: | 9 August 2007 |
| Weight: | 238g |
| Dimensions: | 198mm x 153mm x 22mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
‘It certainly has all the excitement, neurosis and edginess of a book that needed to be written… gritty, heartfelt and honest…it is a real book, by a real writer, about real people’
’[Profumo] has written an elegantly sorrowful account of his family s great shame’ - Peter McKay, Evening Standard
Painful to write, moving to read, this beautifully crafted account will not be the final word on the Profumo affair, but shows that, behind its continuing fascination as the arch political scandal lies a long trail of human misery - Independent on Sunday Elegiac and evocative volume Sunday Telegraph / Seven - Sunday Telegraph / Seven It certainly has all the excitement, neurosis and edginess of a book that needed to be written gritty, heartfelt and honest it is a real book, by a real writer, about real people - Mail on Sunday (Book of the Week review by Craig Brown, 5 out of 5 stars) An intimate, perky, donnishly literate memoir… It is a rather infectious read, elegantly written, often funny, sometimes caustic - Times Gentle, touching, wry - Guardian Profumo s book restores a context to a story that has so long had a life of its own. And it offers a measured and affecting insight into what it was like to be a seven-year-old in the eye of the original tabloid storm - Observer A fascinating, gripping tale - Daily ExpressAbout The Author
David Profumo
David Profumo was born in London in 1955. He is the author of two novels, Sea Music and The Weather In Iceland. A former teacher, and now a freelance journalist, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1997. He lives with his wife and three children in London and Perthshire.
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