I have just spent over 20 hours in the company of one of the best broadcasters I know - Sir David Attenborough, who is probably best known for his natural history series - Life on Earth, Life of Mammals, Life in Cold Blood and the list goes on. His autobiography, A Life on Air, is packed with anecdotes about the trials and tribulations he has undergone during the five decades he has worked to bring the wonders of the natural world to our TV screens. Narrated by the great man himself (I read this on audio format), this book is a wonderful way to relive his memories and some of your own - unless, of course, you've never watched any of his programmes! You get behind the scenes of the very early days of television, when David got his first break as a trainee producer after realising that a life in a publishing house was not for him. But his great love and knowledge about the world we live in and the life which inhabits it could not be ignored, and when he pitched an idea about filming the capture of animals for London Zoo, it set him on the road to the types of stunning films we know today. Always instructive without being patronising, it's a joy to follow David through his life - who I can only imagine must be one hell of a dinner guest. I can highly recommend this book - who would have thought that the technicalities of filming in a jungle would be so interesting.
My STAR rating: FIVE
Length: 416 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99
Formats available: print; audio CD; audio download.
Having finished this and Oliver Twist in the same week, what's next on the reading list? Have you sourced a magnifying glass to make a start on one of the Malta books perhaps?
ReplyDeleteNot sure that my bifocals are up to the task of the books about Malta - but they are still very much on the list ... maybe when we get a a few sunny days strung together ... the extra light might help! I've started a thriller by Peter James and an audio book called Sea of Poppies - both good holiday reads I hope.
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