| Ray Charles Book: I Was Looking for a Street: A Memoir
Book I Was Looking for a Street: A Memoir |  |  | | List Price: $14.95 | | Publisher: Countryman Pr
Salesrank: 1363919
| | Our Price: $27.50 | | Used Price: $8.98 | | | Media: Hardcover | |
I Was Looking for a Street: A Memoir Reviews: Haven't read Willeford? What are you waiting for???  2009-12-03 - Charles Willeford was America's finest writer of crime fiction -- and other kinds of fiction. If you haven't read Willeford yet, what are you waiting for?
Quick -- drop that latest piece of trash about a Vatican conspiracy involving Italian Renaissance painters and frozen alien fossils or whatever -- and track down one or more of the following: "The Burnt Orange Heresy", "The High Priest of California", "The Woman Chaser", "Cockfighter", "Miami Blues", "New Hope for the Dead", "The Black Mass of Brother Springer", or anything else by Willeford, including the above autobiographical title, "I Was Looking for a Street".
Willeford demonstrates what great writing is: great plots, characters, dialogue, prose style -- and you get to learn all kinds of valuable information about things like the used car business and art criticism.
The making of an iconoclast.  2005-06-25 - In I Was Looking for a Street, Charles Willeford (1919-1988) tells in straightforward fashion what his early life was like. Orphaned by age 8 and a rail riding drifter by age 13, Willeford's childhood was a tough one. But there isn't an ounce of bitterness in this memoir. Instead of cursing his misfortune, Willeford sees each setback he endured, no matter how terrible, as a learning experience.
With a minimal amount of sentimentality, Willeford tells how the middle class life he was born into rapidly evaporated when tuberculosis claimed both his parents and, a few years later, the Great Depression thrust his beloved grandmother Mattie into poverty. He goes on to compellingly describe his life as a "road kid" among the hobos and tramps who hopped freight trains in a never ending journey to absolutely nowhere.
Fans of Willeford's novels and short stories will definitely want to read this short but amazing autobiography. Told with the author's trademark matter-of-fact style, the anecdotes contained in I Was Looking for a Street are quite interesting and reveal a lot about the origins of Willeford's unique worldview. Highly recommended.
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