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Time to Be in Earnest: A Fragment of…
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Time to Be in Earnest: A Fragment of Autobiography (1999)

by P.D. James

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An original format - explicitly a diary of a year in P.D. James's life in her 70's. But she takes this starting off point to range widely, to reveal parts of her life, and to digress on matters that interest her.

Her energy and enthusiasm is awe-inspiring, for any age. A bright, positive, intelligent thinker, it's not surprising Phyllis is so much in demand for book-signings and talks.

James was less revealing about being married to someone with a mental illness. In part I admired her - especially in these 'tell-all times' for her reticence, but then she was dismayed by society's misunderstanding - and so surely this should have been a wonderful opportunity to open the door to reveal what it's like to be connected to someone with mental problems and how society could impact positively.

Small gripe, this was a wonderful, uplifting book, by a very special woman. ( )
  LARA335 | Jan 9, 2013 |
P.D. James is every bit as good at writing non-fiction as she is at fiction. Somehow straightforward, modest facts add up to a very impressive life. As Mr. Butler would say, "What a woman." ( )
  Gillian-D | Jun 22, 2010 |
It's good to hear straight from the author, without it being filtered through a character. I only wish Baroness James had given us more than a year's worth here. ( )
  horacewimsey | Jan 5, 2010 |
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Epigraph
At seventy-seven it is time to be in earnest.
- Samuel Johnson
Dedication
To the memory of my Parents

Sidney Victor James
1895-1979
Dorothy May James
1893-1966

remembered with gratitude and love.
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A diary, if intended for publication (and how many written by a novelist are not?), is the most egotistical form of writing.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0345442121, Paperback)

"At seventy-seven it is time to be in earnest," wrote Samuel Johnson, and bestselling crime writer P.D. James took this maxim as a challenge, setting out to record "one year that otherwise might be lost." The result is a fascinating and reflective account, part diary and part memoir, of one very full year of Baroness James's life, interspersed with her memories and intelligent analysis of "what it was like to be born two years after the end of the First World War and to live for seventy-eight years in this tumultuous century." P.D. James grew up in Cambridge, England, between the wars and worked in the home office of the forensic and criminal justice departments, which sparked her interest in that area, though she did not become a published novelist until 1962 with Cover Her Face. She began to write full-time after her "retirement" in 1979, and along the way became a governor of the BBC before taking a seat in the House of Lords in 1991. Time to Be in Earnest is a lucid and penetrative work by one of the most influential figures currently involved with the arts in Britain. James reveals her vast scope for enjoyment, interest, and simply getting on with life (her husband, Connor White, died at the age of 44 in 1964 after years of mental illness), whether it be spending time with her children and grandchildren, musing on the hideous British architectural mistakes of the 1960s, or giving her view of the controversies continually surrounding the running of the BBC. At an age when many people would be considering slowing down, James seems constantly on the move, recording her day-to-day existence and her past with an alert and judicious eye. "I am sustained by the magnificent irrationality of faith," she states. "I inhabit a different body, but I can reach back over nearly 70 years and recognise her as myself. Then I walked in hope--and I do so still." --Catherine Taylor, Amazon.co.uk

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:39:10 -0500)

(see all 5 descriptions)

In 1997, P. D. James, the internationally acclaimed author of mysteries, turned seventy-seven. Taking to heart Dr. Johnson's advice that at seventy-seven it is "time to be in earnest," she decided to undertake a book unlike any she had written before: a personal memoir in the form of a diary. This enchanting and highly original volume is the result. Structured as the diary of a single year, it roams back and forth through time, illuminating James's extraordinary, sometimes painful and sometimes joyful life. Here, interwoven with reflections on her writing career and the craft of crime novels, are vivid accounts of episodes in her own past--of school days in 1920s and 1930s Cambridge . . . of the war and the tragedy of her husband's madness . . . of her determined struggle to support a family alone. She tells about the birth of her second daughter in the midst of a German buzz-bomb attack; about becoming a civil servant (and laying the groundwork for her writing career by working in the criminal justice system); about her years of public service on such bodies as the Arts Council and the BBC's Board of Governors, culminating in entry to the House of Lords. Along the way, with warmth and authority, she offers views on everything from author tours to the problems of television adaptations, from book reviewing to her obsession with Jane Austen.… (more)

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