Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Last Post - cover

Sorry, the publisher does not allow users to read this book from the country from which you are connecting.

Last Post

Frederic Raphael

Publisher: Lives and Letters

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

A The Tablet Book of the Year
Last Post has a double life; it both sounds for the gallant fallen and recalls what spurred freelance journalists, in all those yesterdays before e-mail, to get their copy in the pillar-box by deadline time. Frederic Raphael's compendium, written in the lively equivalent of the French epistolary second person singular, is a rare mixture of loud salutes, occasional raspberries and affectionate farewells.
Its intimacy delivers frankness that formal biography, however plumped with proper sources, seldom achieves. To John Schlesinger, '"Fuck 'em all dear," you used to say. And God knows, you did your best.'; Ludwig Wittgenstein saying 'What do you know about philosophy, Russell, what have you ever known?'; Cyril Connolly to William Somerset Maugham who was complaining about his lack of true lovers, '...then although the room was chilly, no one cared to poke poor Willie'; 'You bloody fool,' the first words said by a venerable professor to George Steiner.
As the parade goes by, Last Post becomes what classicists call a 'prosopography'. Raphael's own versatility shows up in the varieties of tone and vocabulary in long letters of tribute to the two Stanleys Kubrick and Donen, Ken Tynan, Leslie Bricusse, Tom Maschler, Dorothy Nimmo the known and the less known but no less valued; finally, above all, in farewell to his beloved daughter Sarah.
Available since: 07/27/2023.
Print length: 522 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Surviving Hitler Evading Stalin - cover

    Surviving Hitler Evading Stalin

    Mildred Janzen

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    One Woman’s Remarkable Escape from Nazi Germany 
    The peaceful farm life of a teenage girl in Germany is abruptly upended when WWII comes knocking at her family’s door. One month before her sixteenth birthday, Mildred “Mickchen” Schindler and her family are captured by Russian Soldiers. Having already survived life in Hitler’s Nazi Germany, they now face the terror of a new enemy—Stalin’s Red Army. 
    Driven from their home, Mildred and her family become refugees along with a sad, slow-moving caravan of other families who have suffered the same fate. Cleverly disguised by her mother, Mildred avoids being taken to a work camp until one morning when authorities arrive unexpectedly. Her father has already been taken by Russian soldiers, and now she is taken from her mother and brother. 
    Mildred recounts, in meticulous detail, her treacherous journey and the roller coaster of raw emotions she experiences —fear, regret, loneliness, humility, perseverance, and defiance. Mildred’s odyssey of making her way home and finding her family in a war-torn countryside takes many riveting twists and turns. The discovery of a secret, hidden document offers hope for a brighter future. 
    From harrowing to heartwarming, this memoir provides a unique perspective of a Gentile girl’s road to resilience and her fortitude against all odds to forge a life filled with love and laughter. 
    Surviving Hitler, Evading Stalin is a remarkable testimony to the strength of the unconquerable human spirit and an endearing account of God’s faithfulness in the midst of faithless circumstances.
    Show book
  • Sobremesa - A Memoir of Food and Love in Thirteen Courses - cover

    Sobremesa - A Memoir of Food and...

    Josephine Caminos Oría

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The table is where we find our way. Together. 
     
    The communal family table bears witness to our lives. The way we approach each meal speaks volumes about who we are and what we are going through in that very moment. It’s where the spirits of those who left too soon can be conjured back to mind through taste and smell. Still, we underestimate its pull and often miss the soulful nourishment and magic that happens at sobremesa—the time spent talking after a meal—due to our increasingly busy lives. 
     
    In her coming-of-age adventure, Caminos Oría travels to her family’s homeland of Argentina in search of belonging—to family, to country, to a love, and ultimately, to oneself. Steeped in the lure of Latin culture, she pieces together her mom and abuela’s pasts, along with the nourishing dishes—delectably and spiritually—that formed their kitchen arsenal. But Caminos Oría’s travels from las pampas to the prairie aren't easy or conventional. She grapples with mystical encounters with the spirit world that lead her to discover a part of herself that, like sobremesa, had been lost in translation. 
     
    Just as she's ready to give up on love all together, Caminos Oría’s own heart surprises her by surrendering to a forbidden, transcontinental tryst with the Argentine man of her dreams. To stay together, she must make a difficult choice: return to the safe life she knows in the States or follow her heart and set a new table, one where she can be her full self, unapologetically, in full-fledged Spanglish. 
     
    Deliciously soulful and chock full of romance, this otherworldly, multigenerational story of a daughter's love and familial culinary legacy serves up, in 13 courses, a gastronomic meditation on the tables we set for ourselves throughout our lives—knowingly or not.
    Show book
  • Under Jackie's Shadow - Voices of Black Minor Leaguers Baseball Left Behind - cover

    Under Jackie's Shadow - Voices...

    Mitchell Nathanson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The stories of thirteen Black Minor League baseball players during the post–Jackie Robinson era, from the 1960s to the mid-1970s, who were figuratively and literally left behind even as both baseball and the country claimed a newfound racial progressiveness.
    Show book
  • What Sheep Think About the Weather - How to Listen to What Animals Are Trying to Say - cover

    What Sheep Think About the...

    Amelia Thomas

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    It started with a hummingbird dive-bombing Amelia Thomas over her morning coffee, and a pair of piglets who just wouldn't stay put. Soon Amelia, journalist and new farmer, begins to question the communications of the creatures all around her. Are they all just animals reacting instinctually to the world around them—or are they trying to communicate something deeper? 
     
    Driven by lifelong curiosity, Amelia embarks on a journey to uncover what animals truly seek to say to humans. On the way, along with groundbreaking chimps and circumspect octopuses, she'll meet an extraordinary cast of experts, from animal behaviorists and anthrozoologists to trackers and psychologists, and even explore the surprising insights of pet psychics, A.I. researchers, and animal mindfulness practitioners. Each perspective offers a new layer of understanding about the subtle, complex ways animals connect with us—and will deepen our appreciation for every creature with whom we share our planet. 
     
    In What Sheep Think About the Weather, Amelia chronicles her sometimes difficult discoveries with humor, heart, and awe. More than just a memoir, this book is a call to listen—not only to the animals we love but to the untamed world around us. What if the answers to some of humanity's greatest questions have been whispered to us all along?
    Show book
  • Interview with Serial Killer Ted Kaczynski the Unabomber An - cover

    Interview with Serial Killer Ted...

    Ted Kaczynski

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Theodore John Kaczynski (May 22, 1942 - June 10, 2023), also known as the Unabomber, was an American mathematician, serial killer, and domestic terrorist. A mathematics prodigy, he abandoned his academic career in 1969 to pursue a reclusive primitive lifestyle and lone wolf terrorism campaign. Kaczynski murdered three people and injured 23 others between 1978 and 1995 in a nationwide mail bombing campaign against people he believed to be advancing modern technology and the destruction of the natural environment. He authored a roughly 35,000-word manifesto and social critique called “Industrial Society and Its Future” which opposes all forms of technology, rejects leftism and fascism, advocates cultural primitivism, and ultimately suggests violent revolution. The following recording is from a 1999 prison interview.
    Show book
  • The Words of Gad the Seer - Prophecies and Visions of Divine Guidance - cover

    The Words of Gad the Seer -...

    Gad the Seer (Prophet of King...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    What are the words of a prophet who walked alongside King David? How do his visions reveal the justice and mercy of God? 
    The Words of Gad the Seer is a powerful prophetic text from the ancient Hebrew tradition.  
    Attributed to Gad, a trusted prophet and advisor to King David, this work contains divine revelations, spiritual insights, and vivid visions that illuminate God’s justice, mercy, and guidance for His people. 
    Now presented in a clear, modern translation, this edition brings the timeless wisdom of Gad’s prophecies to life for today’s listener. 
    What you'll discover inside: 
    •	Prophecies of Judgment and Redemption – Messages of divine justice, mercy, and the path to spiritual renewal 
    •	Visions of Divine Guidance – Gad’s extraordinary revelations and what they reveal about God’s relationship with humanity 
    •	Lessons on Faith and Leadership – Timeless insights from Gad’s influence during King David’s reign 
    •	A Window into Ancient Hebrew Tradition – A deeper look at the prophetic role in Israel’s spiritual history 
    Whether you're exploring biblical prophecy, seeking spiritual wisdom, or studying the roots of Hebrew scripture, The Words of Gad the Seer offers profound inspiration and insight. 
    Begin your journey today—and uncover the voice of a prophet whose words still speak to the soul.
    Show book