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What to Look for in Winter

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

What to Look for in Winter

Contributors:

By (Author) Candia McWilliam

ISBN:

9780099539537

Publisher:

Vintage Publishing

Imprint:

Vintage

Publication Date:

3rd October 2011

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Coping with / advice about physical impairments / disability

Dewey:

823.914

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

496

Dimensions:

Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 31mm

Weight:

341g

Description

A beautifully written, moving and extraordinary work of autobiography from one of the leading figures of the British literary world. Candia McWilliam had just joined the judging panel of the Man Booker Prize for fiction in 2006 when she started to lose her sight. The gradual onset of blindness seemed especially cruel to someone whose life depended on reading and writing. As McWilliam's sight disappeared she looked inwards and began to remember her Edinburgh childhood, her mother's suicide, her teenage escape into another identity, her marriages, her children and, stalking all these memories, her increasing alcoholism. What To Look For In Winter is a magical, uplifting and truly wise book about families and friendship, love and loss and that most elusive of things - a sense of self.

Reviews

One of the most extraordinary literary autobiographies of this or any other year * The Times *
An essential book in all of its aspects, a thing of beauty and of unbearable hurt, of dreadful harm and intense humanity...This is the work of a capacious, open, vulnerable and unfailingly generous soul * Scotsman *
A searingly honest, beautiful book -- Kate Mosse * Daily Telegraph *
One of the most devastatingly moving memoirs I've ever read...a work of beauty and truth * Independent *
Miraculous -- Hilary Spurling * Guardian *

Author Bio

Candia McWilliam was born in Edinburgh. She is the author of A Case of Knives (1988) which won a Betty Trask Prize, A Little Stranger (1989), Debatable Land (1994) which was awarded the Guardian Fiction Prize and a collection of stories, Wait Till I Tell You (1997). In 2006 she began to suffer from the effects of blepharospasm and became functionally blind as a result. In 2009 she underwent an operation which harvested tendons from her leg in order to enable her to open her eyelids.

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