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Letter from America (Radio Collection)

By: Alistair Cooke
Binding: Audio CD
Publisher: BBC Audiobooks Ltd
ISBN: 0563535644
ISBN-13: 9780563535645
Released: 11 Oct 2004
RRP: £55.00
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Customer Reviews

Perfection - By: Mark42, 18 Sep 2008
Its not too much of an exageration to say that this book is an oversight of 20th century usa. Alistair Cooke's letter is something i came too only a few years before his death & this book goes through from the 40s right until his last letter.

The quality of writing is superb of a man at the cutting edge of history.
Wonderful; Touching; Wise - By: Philip Mayo, 29 Dec 2006
"A post mortem collection of the famous "Letter from America" series written & broadcast on the BBC over a staggering period of 58 years & 2,869 broadcasts. His last broadcast was madein Feb 2004, after which he retired. He died the following monthin his 96th year.

It is simply staggering to consider the prolificacy & quality of these Letters which were faithfully produced against such an unforgiving deadline over so many years. All the more incredible it is to consider that this work constitutes just a fraction of the man's overall output,in many fields. I have the impression that this must have come relatively easy to him, otherwise it would have taken over his life. Fluent writing followed by fluent recording for broadcast. And the repetition honed his style. Indeed, I seem to recall an interview he gavein his latter yearsin which he said that as the years went by he would often arrive at recording studio with no written notes at all & only a vague idea as to what he was going to talk about that week. A virtuosos at workin any field inspires our awe & respect & Alistair Cooke is the virtuoso of the warm, enchanting essay which usually finds a new way, a new angle from which to consider things. I am now an even more serious fan & would recommend this collection to all who might enjoy the company of a thoughtful, wise & entertaining man for a brief while.

An unputdownable summary of the 20th Century - By: Caterkiller, 24 May 2006
To be blunt: Alistair Cooke's writing is of the highest quality. It surpasses most fiction & non-fiction writingsin these terms. The key characteristic of "Letters from America" is that they were meant to be read aloud & so adopt a more authoratative tone than most published writings. Cooke's America is fascinating; it shows what has been forgotten as well as documenting the present. Past luminaries such as HL Mencken, who is now largely forgotten, are describedin detail under the assumption that their memory would live forever. The one criticism is that Cooke covers the news with too light a touch. At leastin this collection, the civil rights movement, the attrocities of the Johnson & Nixon administrationsin Vietnam & Cambodia are only briefly referred to. Apart from that his writing on summersin Long Island, the death of the Kennedies & Clintongate are an absolute pleasure.
A 'Love' Letter to America - By: MR NC SHACKLEY, 18 May 2006

When I left England to livein the United States for one year last August, there was only one book I took with me - Alistair Cooke's 'Letter From America'. What else could I have taken? Cooke saw into America like no other Brit (or no other non-American, for that matter).

Starting at the mid 1940s, the book winds its way through post-war America nearly right up until the authors deathin 2004, picking out the best of his weekly broadcasts. The subject matters range from politics, history, current affairs, entertainment & topics from the New England fall, jazz, Robert Kennedy's assassination (which he witnessed first-hand) & O.J Simpson.

But it is not the subject matter that makes this book so special (for we already know about most of them anyway) it is none other than Cooke's insight & writing style. The articles flow like the finest novel or poem (which is probably attributed to Cooke's backgroundin theatre). Each time you come back to read the book again it feels as though you are receiving the opinions of a familiar friend, & not some distant journalist.

There are drawbacks. Cooke was often criticised, & quite rightly so, for ignoring the darker side of the American dream. The other possible drawback, depending on your viewpoint, is that Cooke was a committed conservative, especiallyin the latter half of his career. Many of the final articles from the late 90's & early 00's lament the current position of America & (what he saw as) the sliding standards of journalism. Maybe, but you also can't help feel that he was by this point slightly out of touch.

These minor quibbles, however, cannot undermine Cooke's overall achievement of helping us better understand this important nation, which could be described as love letters to America.

Read this and you'll be wanting more.. - By: G. Wake, 26 Apr 2006
I have been listening to Alastair Cooke's broadcasts for many years, always finding something rewardingin them: a reference to an age before I was born, a different view point about an issue or something everyone else appeared to have missed. Cooke brought the ordinary into the major world events, showed the human side to many a major story & gave others the chance to see a perspective only obtainable through many years of hard work & intelligent inquiry. This book only contains a tiny number of the vast quantities of Letters from America but they are worthwhile letters; reading these samples of nearly sixty years of broadcasting provides a special insight into many issues, historical events & people largely forgotten or interpreted differently by a modern audience. Much of the most interesting content of the book is simply that of an old man explaining how the world changedin his lifetime: Cooke tells of the constants that he believed would last forever that new generations have never even heard of. It's worth reading for that warning alone. Regardless of the fading of the world Cooke knew his letters are both timeless reflections on people's nature & historically important records of a not so distant past. Some of the letters are includedin the BBC audio CD collection but most are not so even if you have those recordings this book is still a worthwhile read. It's a different kind of America to that seen on the TV & movie theatre screens.

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