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Bits of Me are Falling Apart: Dark Thoughts from the Middle Years


by William Leith
Bits of Me are Falling Apart: Dark Thoughts from the Middle Years
List Price: ££10.99
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Manufacturer: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

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Binding: Paperback
EAN: 9780747591726
ISBN: 0747591725
Label: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Number Of Pages: 208
Publication Date: 2008-08-04
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Studio: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

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Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: 3 or 4 stars?
Comment: In one way i was disappointed with this book, it has to be said out right. In his earlier work, "the Hungry Years" the pages skipped by as you joined him on his odyssey of weight-loss, modern times, and, inevitably, his sober and painful reflections on therapy and childhood. I still find some of it haunting now. At the end he has lost weight and is well on the road to discovery ...

Little BIts of Me ... well it felt like that road got a bit lost. the book has no direction, no manna of weight loss or therapy success. it just felt like quite a lot of inexplicable sadness and loss. also, there was occasional filler, long episodes of movie narrative i found myself skipping.

but it had its strengths too. there is still the force of the writer to be dealt with. his paragraphs on work and the consequential dreary passing of time, I swear it was the truth i have never seen written so clearly in passing. the truth about when you are young the future is your opponent, when you are middle-aged it is the past, and a much stonger opponent too. much rings true. the taboo of middle age is grappled with - the "falling apart", the physical decline, the prospect of death considered as a reality as never before, and so on.

i had a nagging suspicion monsieur leith did write it a bit as a quick way to make some money , he is fairly open about his financial situation re his concerns with things like getting a mortage, his son's welfare, etc. though in a way, i didn't really resent the money therefore, however mulch of a rush job it was. many of his musings were worth 5 episodes of The Times and more. hope he gets to write more, and hope more happiness beckons.


p.s. his description of the financial 'crisis' beckoning, heh, its positively spookily spot-on in its prediction, and another piece in the book worth reading.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: More Pieces Than Bits
Comment: William Leith is a journalist and the author of the bestselling book on over-consumption called, The hungry Years, in which his addictions to food, alcohol and everything else were torn apart in minute detail to great acclaim.

I will confess that I had never heard of William Leith nor his previous book until I read several other reviews of his new book, Bits Of Me Are Falling Apart. Immediately I was fasinated to read this book. Firstly, I'm about Leith's age and it sounded as though we shared some common ground in the fact we both feel at that time in life when you are more old than young and things are never going to get better. And secondly, the author of the book I had just bought lived just down the road from me via a couple of villages, so we were off to a good start.

This book could have been written for the fortysomething bloke who may feel washed up and in despair as to what to do next before time runs out. But it is a book for anyone who enjoys reading what a skilled writer can do when they wish to weave their web in a casual and direct way. Of course, Leith has had years of perfecting his art, and his style has been honed to taking the trival and everyday and turning it into wriiten gold.

Leith begins by waking up on a mattress in his office and from then on we are treated to just over two hundred pages of a day in the life of William Leith and his thoughts on just about everything for the banking system to the state of his left shoulder. This is done in an almost rambling, stream of conciousness style. His body is falling apart, cells are conflicting with each other causing everything to go wrong, and this in turn is Leith's metaphor for what is happening in society: everything is falling apart.

From the start Leith tells us all about his particular falling apart and I found he sounded more like a sixty-seven year old suffering from hypochondria rather than a forty-seven year old with the same complaint. Leith must have played hard to end up in this condition and he seems preoccupied with all types of illnesses which he may or may not get.

This of course all adds to the writer's arsenal of material which fellow journalist, the late Jeffrey Bernard used so successfully in his Low Life columns in the Spectator magazine. Rather than Bernard, I immediately thought of Simon Gray's diaries when reading Leith's thoughts on the human condition and the way he so brilliantly slides off his subject and on to another and another. If Leith is very, very clever at this then Simon Gray was the ultimate master of it, chewing and mulling over words, paragraphs and then almost throwing them away and then catching them again.

Leith can't quite take away Simon Gray's crown with this book nor has he intended to; he is far too good a writer for that. There is a certain take on a subject that may leave some readers feeling cold and there is a lot of bleakness here as well. Leith's day has the feeling of just coming out of rehab and having to face the outside world again without the booze and drugs in a nervous fractured way.

But if like me you want someone to sum what semi-middle age is all about then they will do no worst than to investigate Leith's thoughts on the subject. I'm glad to have found William Leith but I'm not sure if I like his world. This book is at times too near the truth, and that is why it deserves to be a best-seller.


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