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Excellent piece of journalism documenting the disappearance of American Charles Horman in Chile in 1973, just after the military coup that overthrew Salvador Allende’s government. The author lays out the timeline of events, what may have led to his arrest, and the ways in which US officials’ actions may have contributed to his death. In a parallel narrative, the author follows Horman’s wife and father as they attempt to find out what happened, running into a bureaucratic nightmare. The term “non-fiction that reads like fiction” applies to this book.

Horman disappeared at the beginning of Augusto Pinochet’s Reign of Terror. This book was published in 1977. Subsequent events, investigations, and releases of previously confidential information support Hauser’s conclusions. As I read, I found myself hoping for a different outcome.

I found this book at a local used bookstore. A news article was folded within its pages, about Joyce Horman and her search for truth, published in February 2000. I then researched the latest status on the internet, so I was able to trace this history of this tragic event over four-plus decades.
 
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Castlelass | 1 andere bespreking | Oct 30, 2022 |
A fictional final word from Dickens... This short novel by Thomas Hauser is a bit like a biography, posing as an autobiography, wrapped around a fictional account of murder, corruption, exploitation, and romance (of a sort). It's not a gripping tale, but if you're a Dickens fan, it's a good story.
 
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DLMorrese | 3 andere besprekingen | Oct 14, 2016 |
Thomas Hauser is one of the most perceptive writers to deal with sport of boxing, and everyone should read his books on the topic. This collection deals with the collision of the American Boxing establishment and a Cardiff wales, boxer named Joe Calzaghe. Of Italian-welsh ancestry in a Welsh Coal mining town Calzaghe became a very skilled fighter indeed. Open to the charge that his undefeated record of 44-0 was the result of local favouritism, this super middleweight managed to get Bernard Hopkins to fight him, and in Nevada. Calzaghe, though knocked down in the first round, went on to land twice as many punches as Hopkins. Hopkins held constantly, and every time Hopkins popped out of his very defensive shell, Calzaghe hammered him back into it. Advantage Wales! Two judges gave the fight to Calzaghe by wide margins, one to Hopkins by one point. Advantage to the British boxer!
There was no one left to fight but Roy Jones Junior, and the fight was set in Madison Square Garden, the temple of Boxing in America. And when Calzaghe hit the Canvas in the first round, (Tape later revealed that Jones had used his Forearm on the Welshman.) America settled down to watch the Welshman get schooled by the classic American Boxer. It was a beautiful boxing match between dedicated professionals! Calzaghe just kept beating Jones to the punch, and opened a cut on Roy that gave him serious trouble for the rest of the fight. All three judges gave the fight to Joe Calzaghe, 118-109. And Joe had a wonderful time for the last four rounds...and then Calzaghe took the championship and went home to Wales, retiring undefeated after 46 fights!
 
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DinadansFriend | May 20, 2016 |
Ruby Spriggs lives a precarious life in Dicken’s London with her uncle, Christopher until they encounter Antonio, a baker and Octavius Joy, a man of considerable wealth and even more considerable heart. Octavius had helped Antonio open the bakery and now Antonio finds Christopher a job at another bakery run by Marie Wells who recently lost her son. Eventually, Ruby meets Edwin Chatfield and the two fall hopelessly in love. Unfortunately, Edwin’s employer Alexander Murd and his snobbish and cruel daughter, Isabella have other plans for Edwin and hatch a plan to break the two up.

If Thomas Hauser didn’t say that he based his novel The Baker’s Tale on a comment by Charles Dickens, his admiration for the great writer would still shine through in this, his latest novel. He does a marvelous job of recreating not only Dicken’s style of writing but his use of caricature and subject matter. Like in any good Dickens novel, Ruby Spriggs is a beautiful and innocent orphan, Edwin Chatfield is handsome, kind, and good, Octavius has a heart of gold and Murd et fille are unrelentingly and wonderfully smarmy and underhanded. And, of course, there are the same unlikely coincidences and lucky happenstances that fill Dickens’ pages and which will eventually lead to the undoing of the evildoers after much suffering from our hero and heroine.

The one thing, though, that is missing is the humour and endearing eccentricities that marked Dickens’ books and helped to make his criticisms of 19th c. society less biting and, thus, more easily acceptable to the upper classes while satisfying his huge audience among the working class. Fortunately, The Baker’s Tale also lacks Dickens’ verbosity so that this lack didn’t interfere too much with my enjoyment of the novel. This is a fun story, well-written and with interesting characters. If you are a fan of Charles Dickens, this one’s definitely for you.
 
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lostinalibrary | Jan 5, 2016 |
The Final Recollections of Charles Dickens is a fun little novel (coming in at only 157 pages) disguised as a Charles Dickens autobiography. The book, set in 1870 London, is narrated entirely in the voice of 58-year-old Charles Dickens who is feeling older than his years and wants to reveal one final episode of his life before it is too late to ever do so– indeed, Dickens would die in June of that very year.

The incident revealed here by Dickens occurred in 1835 shortly after he proposed marriage to his future wife, Catherine. When the upwardly mobile Dickens becomes acquainted with Geoffrey Wingate, one of London’s most successful and prominent financial advisors, he also meets the man’s stunningly beautiful wife, Amanda. Amanda is so beautiful, in fact, that her memory will haunt Dickens for the rest of his life. His own marriage is an unhappy one, and for decades after he has lost contact with the beautiful Amanda, Dickens fantasizes about what might have been if he had only met her before Geoffrey Wingate made her his wife.

While doing research in preparation for an article featuring Geoffrey Wingate, Dickens learns that there is more to the Wingates than meets the eye. He begins to suspect that Geoffrey Wingate may be little more than a common criminal and that his wife is hiding a sordid past of her own. But it is only after interviewing a former prostitute whose face has been brutally mutilated, that Dickens recognizes the degree of evilness he is dealing with in the person of Geoffrey Wingate. Now, in more personal danger than even he imagines, Dickens has to decide what to do about his suspicions.

By blending facts from the real life of Charles Dickens with his fictionalized, hands-on investigation of one of London’s bad guys, Thomas Hauser has created a fun ride through the very streets of London that Dickens portrayed in his own novels. Hauser has, in fact, so wonderfully captured the Dickens voice readers have grown familiar with from those nineteenth century novels that it is easy for readers to forget that they are not reading something written by Mr. Dickens himself. If a nineteenth-century man in his early twenties can still be said to be coming of age, what Hauser has written here is in reality a coming-of-age novel featuring Charles Dickens. And it is a good one.
 
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SamSattler | 3 andere besprekingen | May 1, 2015 |
Charles Dickens is close to death, but he has one last tale to tell. It is a fascinating story of murder, class and privilege in Victorian England. Hauser does a creditable job of combining history and fiction with the ambiance of Dickensian London. Although this is a story of murder, it is not exactly a mystery since the reader knows who the villain is from the very beginning—a clearly evil con man. The gulf that existed between the classes that Dickens explored so well in his fiction is present as are echoes of characters and events that influenced his writings. However Hauser also manages to speculate about aspects of his private life that are not evident in Dickens’ novels—unfulfilled romance, struggles to master his craft and dealing with fame. Hauser’s extensive research into Dickens’ life is evident in the creation of a fully realized character. Unfortunately, the novel is too short—easily read in one sitting—which limits Hauser’s ability to fully develop the setting or most of the minor characters.
 
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ozzer | 3 andere besprekingen | Nov 25, 2014 |
Part love story, part history, part crime drama. This book was really an interesting read. It took real facts and mixed them with fiction and the mix is quite a good story. The author states that this is Dickens' final manuscript from his locked box which was opened in 2013. Fans of Dickens will appreciate the characters and the city of London in this book as they are so reminiscent of the ones in his published novels. The lower classes, the working class, the wealthy, the squalor, the beauty, all living together, yet separately.
 
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bnbookgirl | 3 andere besprekingen | Nov 12, 2014 |
A superior production among boxing books, with less reference to the fights, and an attempt to cover the life away from the ring more fully. I recommend it as a good first book on Ali.
 
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DinadansFriend | 2 andere besprekingen | Oct 31, 2013 |
A short essay written by "The King". Packed full of wisdom on the game of golf, it is a must read for anyone who has ever teed up a little white ball.
 
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csayban | Jul 25, 2012 |
I want to be strong like him. He gave me courage!!
He taught me "Never give up!!"
If he had had his bike stolen, He would be a boxer.
 
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Taizo | 2 andere besprekingen | Jul 28, 2008 |
The is no shortage of books written about Muhammad Ali, most of which generally riff on the meaning of Ali's cultural significance. Hauser attempts a straightforeward biography, and succeeds in telling Ali's tale with a minimum of fuss.
 
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EdKupfer | 2 andere besprekingen | Dec 13, 2006 |
Toon 12 van 12