My Father
My Father
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Summary
Explosive story of life with the volcanic father of our media age, John Reith, founder of the BBC. Shortlisted for the Saltire Award as Best Book of the Year, this is the story of the human cost of greatness.
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My Father by Marista Leishman
Drama was at the heart of the volcanic life of Lord Reith. Through the eyes of his daughter, we see, for the first time, into the personal story of a man who made a legendary contribution to British culture. Towering 6'6" tall, Reith was an easy target for a sniper during the first World War. The scar on his cheek, from the wound that almost killed him, heightened his commanding appearance. His immense gifts of oratory and organisation - and his great reserves of energy - stamped their mark on the fledgling BBC. From an office little bigger than a broom cupboard, an institution was formed whose standards to this day have the respect of the world. Reith's compelling story also includes a perilous wartime journey with his young family across the Atlantic, a stormy relationship with Churchill, the abdication of a king and much more besides. Larger than life, he was a man of excessive contradictions, with the heights of outrageous success matched by bitter, black despair. Personal qualities that marked him out as exceptional on the world stage were just as intense in their private infliction of damage on himself and his family.
‘..a sensational book’ -- Andrew Marr
‘...it was a surprise and a delight, one of the best family memoirs I have read - honest, funny, sharp, well-written but never bitter - although a person other than Marista would have had plenty to be bitter about.’ -- Elizabeth Grice * Daily Telegraph *
‘Great men have feet of clay. The contradictions of Reith's life do not diminish his contribution to the world, but force us to recognise that there is always a cost to great achievement. This is a revealing read about a real person, not the fantasy saint he has sometimes been painted to be.’ -- Rt Rev. Nick Baines
'Enthralling and enlightening. 10/10.' * The Second World War Magazine *
'Reith's long shadow sometimes seems impenetrable. This casts some welcome new light on him.' -- James Naughtie
'One of the most fascinating books I've read in a very long time . . . Reith emerges as one of the omost extraordinary figures of hte twentieth century: the dark varnish covering the poular portrait of a patriarchal, dour and humourless Reith has been removed to reveal the twinke and style of a much more interesting and important man.' -- Stephen Fry
Reithian values, after so many years at the BBC, run through me like a stick of Blackpool rock, Matista Leishman's biography is a fascinating insight into the character and personality of the first Director General and the mad, early days of the corporation. She manages to inform, educated and entertain. Like father, like daughter, I guess!' -- Jenni Murray, BBC Radio 4
John Reith is a legend, a man admired almost everywhere for creating the BBC, a unique organisation which had had a profound incluence right across the world... Is this the time to debunk the Reithian legend? Read the book and make up your own mind.' -- Greg Dyke
T'he public achievement of the father is set against a background of profound human frailty at home . . . John Reith remains on e of the commanding figures of the twentieth century and the creator of one of its greatest institutions.' -- Sir Michael Checkland
‘...it was a surprise and a delight, one of the best family memoirs I have read - honest, funny, sharp, well-written but never bitter - although a person other than Marista would have had plenty to be bitter about.’ -- Elizabeth Grice * Daily Telegraph *
‘Great men have feet of clay. The contradictions of Reith's life do not diminish his contribution to the world, but force us to recognise that there is always a cost to great achievement. This is a revealing read about a real person, not the fantasy saint he has sometimes been painted to be.’ -- Rt Rev. Nick Baines
'Enthralling and enlightening. 10/10.' * The Second World War Magazine *
'Reith's long shadow sometimes seems impenetrable. This casts some welcome new light on him.' -- James Naughtie
'One of the most fascinating books I've read in a very long time . . . Reith emerges as one of the omost extraordinary figures of hte twentieth century: the dark varnish covering the poular portrait of a patriarchal, dour and humourless Reith has been removed to reveal the twinke and style of a much more interesting and important man.' -- Stephen Fry
Reithian values, after so many years at the BBC, run through me like a stick of Blackpool rock, Matista Leishman's biography is a fascinating insight into the character and personality of the first Director General and the mad, early days of the corporation. She manages to inform, educated and entertain. Like father, like daughter, I guess!' -- Jenni Murray, BBC Radio 4
John Reith is a legend, a man admired almost everywhere for creating the BBC, a unique organisation which had had a profound incluence right across the world... Is this the time to debunk the Reithian legend? Read the book and make up your own mind.' -- Greg Dyke
T'he public achievement of the father is set against a background of profound human frailty at home . . . John Reith remains on e of the commanding figures of the twentieth century and the creator of one of its greatest institutions.' -- Sir Michael Checkland
Marista Leishman grew up in the dramatic and awkward household of Sir John Reith. She attended a rigorous boarding school and then St Andrews University. After graduating with a degree in English and Philosophy, she spent time fundraising.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780715208342 |
| ISBN 10 | 0715208349 |
| Title | My Father |
| Author | Marista Leishman |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Saint Andrew Press |
| Year published | 2006-09-26 |
| Number of pages | 336 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |