Home View Cart Bookmark This Page Contact Us
 
Categories
Books
DVD
Electronics & Photo
Garden & Outdoors
Home & Garden
Kitchen & Home
Music
Personal Care
Software
Toys
Video
Video Games
Search Keywords
teach yourself russian
the little match girl
hddvds
magic 48
doves and dovecotes
k t tunstall
promises and lies
lonely planet tanzania
midlake
wrath of the lich
Home > Book > Parky: My Autobiography
Parky: My Autobiography

List Price : £20.00
Our Price : £6.00
     
10 Used :from £3.50
44 New :from £4.00
2 Collectible :from £28.00
   
Availability : Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Add Review
Custom Reviews: 
A trip down memory lane
5 out of 5 stars.
Got the book as a xmas pressie from my daughter. I lived in the same street as Michael Parkinson in Cudworth so much of the early part of the book was a definite trip down memory lane for me. Other reviewers have commented on the overload of cricket but as someone who knows nothing about the sport i didn't try to understand it from this book. What the cricket stories told me were more about his love for his father, his passions, his respect for sporting skill, his frustration with those that thrived on the adulation but resented the media interest and of how lifelong friendships are forged from a common love of a sport. Suppose its down to what you are looking for in an autobiog.

I found his writing style fantastic - easy, punchy and engaging. Loved all the snippets about the celebs. Had not realised he worked as a war correspondent and some of his stories are harrowing - but war is - and his attempts to make non-obvious political statements about the waste of war perhaps could have been more overt - having seen it first hand and now he is retired he should be entitled to voice his true feelings about it in a book like this.

His analysis of the BEEB was hard hitting and not something us viewers have much of an appreciation of.

Overall I found Parky quite self-deprecating in his book - something that is evident in reading other good autobiogs in my view.

Thoroughly enjoyed it!




A wonderful book
5 out of 5 stars.
Do not read this if you are only interested in Parkinson's chat show reminiscences, as many negative reviewers seem to be. Parkinson is not a one dimensional character. He has many interests and has worked in many fields during his long career. He writes about every aspect of his life with honesty and feeling. A wonderful read.

Mr Chat Show
3 out of 5 stars.
I was looking forward to Michael Parkinson's autobiography. I knew a little bit about him already, his humble beginnings in Yorkshire, his friendship with Dickie Bird, as well as all the wonderful people he has met through his chat show. This book filled in the gaps for things I did not know. How he got to being a journalist working on local papers to eventual national papers through producing television programmes to hosting what has become a national institution of his talk show.

The book starts off well, describing what it was like living in a Yorkshire pit village, the impact the colliery and miners had on his life as well as the influence of his father a very strong character is very apparent. The biggest encouragement his father gave him, beside in my opinion keeping his feet firmly on the ground is that he should be living and breathing cricket.

As a reader, I would certainly agree that 'Parky' certainly does this, and the book has a lot of cricket in it and I agree with over reviewers who have said it is a bit top heavy with it, and for someone who does not understand cricket, these parts of the book were virtually skipped over because I simply do not understand the terminology and the who the people are. He has a great love of sport, not just cricket and his tales of George Best make you realise what a superstar we lost when he died. There are names I recognised but they were few and far between when it came to sports stars.

That said there is some really great parts to the book and I loved learning about how much politics there is in the television that we as a viewer do not see, how ratings, money and whether your face fits at the time. At least you can understand how he got the guests he did, and the advice he gave many so the interview worked. But do not think these were primed guests; this was merely advice from a legend who knows his stuff.

A lot of the stories told about the celebrities I had heard before, if you are looking for any new revelations then this is not the book for you. Parky keeps counsel where it would obviously upset anyone. Don't worry he does mention the infamous 'Meg Ryan' incident, Emu and the colossus that is Mohammed Ali. All those iconic moments we get to see over and over again.

If you are looking for a kiss and tell then this is not the book for you, this is a genuine Yorkshire man, being very genuine about his life, his love for sport, television and importantly Mary his wife and the fact that he had the opportunity to meet the people, that me and you as 'ordinary folk' would never get the chance to meet. Parky bridges that gap.


Could have been so much more interesting
2 out of 5 stars.
Even as a non-Englishman (I'm Dutch) I was well-acquainted with the talk show Parkinson. I watched it whenever I had a chance to catch it and I admired the way Michael Parkinson was able to get interesting stories out of (almost) every one of his guests. That, combined with positive reviews of this book convinced me to buy it. Boy, was I wrong...
Unlike one of the other reviewers I was not hoping for gossip, but I would have liked some more details about the assorted guests on the show, especially the Hollywood stars from the days of old. He does tell us something about them, but not very much. Instead he just goes on and on about bloody cricket, which I couldn't care less about.
If you like Michael Parkinson: watch the shows, don't read this book!

this book is so so
2 out of 5 stars.
Parky is familiar to almost everybody, and especially on X Factor you can see him a lot, but his this book: My Autobiography, is not so interesting. I couldnt wait to grab one from the book shelf, but once I've read it for some pages, I found it disappoiting, coz it didnt tell much about himself and his story on television, which could interest people more, especially women.