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Titanic, The Voices From The BBC Archive
Titanic, The Voices From The BBC Archive
Oct 4, 2024 5:25 AM

Author:Mark Jones,Tim Pigott-Smith

Titanic, The Voices From The BBC Archive

The RMS Titanic sailed from Southampton en route for New York on her maiden voyage with 2228 passengers and crew on board. On the 14th April at twenty minutes before midnight, sailing at almost full speed, she struck an iceberg and sank in just two and a half hours. Over 1500 lives were lost. This is the story of a great tragedy described by the surviving passengers, officers and crew who were on board that night. Firsthand accounts help to explain why so few of the passengers took to the lifeboats and later describe the miraculous survival of those forced to jump into the icy waters of the North Atlantic. The story of the Titanic is ultimately one of simple human loss and these laconic Edwardian voices bring it vividly to life. The hold that these events have on our imagination is as strong now as it ever has been in the 100 years since the great ship went down.

Reviews

A riveting read

—— Daily Mail

This rags-to-riches tale of the pop idol will have you entranced from start to finish

—— Yours Magazine

A real rags-to-riches story, this memoir offers the reader a window onto the life of a true icon

—— Inside Soap

If we have to grow old (and as they say, consider the alternative) there's no better guide

—— People Magazine (Top 10 Books of 2010)

Tantalizingly fresh and forthright... She's self-effacing and brilliant. I use lines of hers all the time... She's like Benjamin Franklin or Shakespeare: her words are now part of the fabric of the English language

—— The New York Times Book Review

As a writer,novelist and award-winning screenwriter and director of films such as When Harry Met Sally and Sleepless In Seattle, she has had the ability to surf the zeitgeist and make whatever is on her mind... seem fascinating and cool... her book is essential reading for anyone who hopes to grow old elegantly and perhaps a little disgracefully

—— Jane Shilling , Mail on Sunday

So clear-eyed, so free of vitriol and sarcasm and artifice that we believe everything she says... If a theme runs beneath the wit and cleverness of I Remember Nothing, it is about the difficulty of coming to terms with one's mortality

—— Jane Juska , San Francisco Chronicle

Ephron's voice helped launch a whole new way of writing, and I still love to hear it

—— Mary McNamara , Los Angeles Times

Witty and carefree... She remains the neighbor we all wish we had. Someone to share a cup of coffee with. Or better yet, a glass of wine. Maybe two... Listen... If we're all headed to the old folks home, we couldn't have a better guide than Nora Ephron

—— USA Today

Rich with self-deprecating humor at its finest... so much so that you can almost hear her laughing as she pounds away at the keyboard... a full pleasure to read

—— New York Journal of Books

She can write an entertaining riff about practically anything or everybody

—— Janet Maslin , The New York Times

Fabulous... tremendously talented... She'll dazzle you with strings of perfect prose

—— Washington Post

Sophisticatedly smart, freshly wide-eyed

—— The Times

Cheerfully wry collection... It's witty and, contrary to the title, Ephron remembers much

—— Daily Express

Full of anecdotal gifts you will never forget... Ephron reflects on the early days of her career-memories of her time working as a mail girl at Newsweek and writing for Esquire-while taking every opportunity to get real about her life at the time she was penning this memoir.

—— Oprah Magazine
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