Synopses & Reviews
Miles Gone By is a landmark literary event: the autobiography of William F. Buckley Jr., woven from personal pieces composed over the course of a celebrated writing life of more than fifty years.
Here is Buckley the boy, growing up in a family of ten rambunctious children, with a saintly mother and spirited father; Buckley the daring young political controversialist and enfant terrible whose debut book, God and Man at Yale, was a shocking New York Times bestseller; Buckley the editor of National Review, widely hailed as the founder of the modern conservative movement; Buckley the politician and mischievous humorist; Buckley the proud father and devoted husband; Buckley the spy and novelist of spies; and Buckley the yachtsman and bon vivant.
Along the way, youll be treated to Buckleys romance with wine, his love of the right word, his intoxication with music, and his joy in skiing and travel.
Youll also meet Buckleys friends: Ronald Reagan, zestfully concerned for the company of others; Henry Kissinger amusing, curious, ever-so-lightly irreverent; Clare Boothe Luce, a renowned beauty and man of affairs (a feminist, she stoutly resisted the stylistic effronteries of she-speech); Tom Wolfe, with a trace of a Virginia accent, and of course there is the renowned diffidence, the matador taking tea with his mother; John Kenneth Galbraith, who consistently writes pleasant tributes to my own books, inevitably advising the reader that my political opinions should be ignored, my fiction or accounts of life at sea appreciated; David Niven, of whom my wife suspected that his magic was to induce a whim, so that he could gratify it; and many others.
This unforgettable work paints a wonderful and indelible picture of an extraordinary man and his extraordinary life.
Review
"Reading Miles Gone By, his latest collection of autobiographical pieces, a book of charm and grace and wit, one finds it virtually impossible to envision Buckley as his liberal critics have for so long." Jon Meacham, The New York Times Book Review
Synopsis
Here is a unique collection of fifty years of essays by William F. Buckley, Jr. chosen to form an unconventioanl career as the consevative writer par excellence.
Synopsis
This unique collection highlights 50 years of essays by William F. Buckley, Jr., revealing him to be a conservative writer par excellence.
Synopsis
Here is a unique collection of fifty years of essays chosen to form an unconventional autobiography and capstone to his remarkable career as the conservative writer par excellence. Included are essays that capture Buckley's joyful boyhood and family life; his years as a conservative firebrand at Yale; the life of a young army officer; his love of wine and sailing; memories of his favourite friends; the great influences of music and religion; a life in politics; and exploring the beauty, diversity, and exactitude of the English language