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Alive, Alive Oh!
Alive, Alive Oh!: And Other Things that Matter | Diana Athill
19 posts | 9 read | 56 to read
In this sequel to Costa Biography Award-winning Somewhere Towards the End, Diana Athill writes vivaciously, poignantly, and with extraordinary clarity about what really matters in the end, from the remarkable vantage point of her late ninetiesWhat matters in the end? In the final years of life, which memories stand out? Writing from her retirement home in Highgate, London, as she approaches her 100th year, Diana Athill reflects on what it is like to be in her nineties, and on the moments in her life which have risen to the surface and sustain her in her later years.She recalls in sparkling detail the exact layout of the garden of her childhood, a vast and beautiful park attached to a large house, and writes with humour, clarity and honesty about her experiences of the First and Second World Wars, and her trips to Europe as a young woman. In the remarkable title chapter, Athill describes her pregnancy at the age of forty-three, losing the baby and almost losing her life, and her gratitude on discovering that she had survived.With vivid memories of the past mingled with candid, wise and often very funny reflections on the experience of being very old, Alive, Alive Oh! reminds us of the joy and richness to be found at every stage of life.
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ravenlee
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For the first four days of December I finished a book a day. And then…that stopped. I‘ve got I Capture the Castle and The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet both in the works, but kiddo‘s being very needy and then my mom was visiting and everybody needs me to do everything all the time. So I‘ve read something like four pages in the last week. I have two gigs this week which is good for me and bad for reading time. Ah, December. But I‘m alive!

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arlenefinnigan
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Pickpick

This is a really enjoyable collection of essays. Diana Athill had a great interesting life, and is refreshingly honest about her privilege and the decisions she made. She was 98 when she wrote this and hearing the recollections and thoughts of that age is fascinating and makes you think about how you want to look back on your life if you're lucky enough to reach that age.

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arlenefinnigan
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Next up

Lindy Love Athill‘s writing ❤️ 4y
CarolynM Hi Arlene👋 How are you? I've never asked you if your hand is fully recovered. Hope so🤗 4y
arlenefinnigan @CarolynM yes, thank you! I'm keeping up the physio, I think I have a naturally stiff neck 😉 4y
CarolynM 👍 4y
29 likes1 stack add4 comments
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Tonton
Lindy What a remarkable woman she was. I enjoyed her memoirs and I like her advice: “avoid romanticism and abhor possessiveness.” 5y
Tonton @Lindy I really admire her! 5y
23 likes2 comments
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BethM
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I'm alive! Just catching up! Just Been overwhelmed with life and work, but I'm back. Until vacation next week anyway ;) EDIT: what have I missed? What's going on with all of you?

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kaysworld1
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Can we give this lady some recognition she is 100 years old.

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Lindy
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"Because it was a pre-Jekyll garden, the Rose beds were the only flower beds except for those for picking, tucked away in the kitchen garden."

While I've known about Gertrude Jekyll and have read her writings, I hadn't known the extent of her influence on garden design.

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Lindy
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How extraordinary - how wonderful! - it is that a lot of little black marks on paper can bring a person who died nearly 200 years ago into your room: bring him so close that you know him much better than you would have known him if you met him in the flesh.

LeahBergen 7y
shawnmooney Love the quote - love the photo even more! 💜❤ 7y
Lindy @shawnmooney I took the photo at the Plantin-Moretus printing museum in Antwerp. It's a wonderful place. 😊 7y
40 likes3 comments
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Lindy
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"As a child I knew exactly what was most desirable: pinkness and sparkle. When I was grown up I was going to sweep down a flight of stairs into a great ballroom wearing a pink satin dress with a huge skirt: yards and yards of the shiniest pink satin, because obviously if something was desirable you couldn't have too much of it. Oh, scrumptious pinkness!"
#pinkcovers

LeahBergen I remember those Easy Reader editions! 7y
Lindy @LeahBergen The price printed on the cover is 59 cents. 7y
36 likes2 comments
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Lindy
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The bleach was a grassy space slightly larger than a tennis court where linen was hung or spread to be whitened by sunlight.

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Lindy
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Pickpick

Athill's writing is rich, clear, beautiful and wise. Her 100th birthday is coming up in 2017 and I really hope she continues on strong, right past that milestone. It is so inspiring to read about what her life is like in her late nineties. Gives me peace regarding my own future, since longevity is in my family.

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Lindy
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Athill lives in a senior's residence and describes the day three of them (ages 94, 94 & 97) planted six rose bushes in the garden there.
"By the time we tottered back to our rooms we were too exhausted to speak, but we were very pleased with ourselves. One good thing about being physically incapable of doing almost anything is that if you manage to do even a little something, you feel great."

lynneamch So pretty! You might enjoy 7y
Soubhiville This sounds wonderful! 7y
ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled I ❤her. I especially remember a passage she wrote about having to let go of all her books to move into assisted living. Broke my heart. 7y
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Lindy @ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled yes. I think she had room for only about 200 out of 1,000. But she discovered she enjoyed giving them away. 7y
Lindy @lynneamch Sounds good. Thanks for the recommendation. 7y
Lindy @Soubhiville All of her writing is good. My favourite is 7y
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Lindy
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Athill's chapter on Tobago addresses issues that are the fabric of Dennis-Benn's novel, so these make a good (unlikely) pair. Regarding revolutionary actions of Tobagonians: "even if they cannot alter the economic structure which condemns them to exploitation, they will no longer stand being used as live furniture in someone else's beautiful dream."

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Lindy
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Jemimas, which I've never seen or heard of elsewhere, were clumsy overshoes made of waterproofed felt, fastening over the instep with a latchet. Galoshes were considered sissy, whereas jemimas, although they looked much more old-womanish, were perfectly acceptable on manly feet.

Hobbinol Gender issues are always weird. 7y
Lindy @Hobbinol True. 7y
Spiderfelt My dad wore those in the 80s, probably something he brought from his Newfoundland background. 7y
32 likes3 comments
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MrBook
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#TBRtemptation post! From the award-winning memoirist comes this latest memoir...written at the tender age of 98 😁👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻! From her home for the elderly in London, she recalls, with concrete vividness, many more events from her long life well-lived, including childhood days in her grandmother's garden, getting pregnant in her 40s, and books she's enjoyed. These 10 essays are about life, not death. Loved by many! #blameLitsy #blameMrBook 😎

Zelma You are no help with keeping my TBR list under control! 😂 7y
kspenmoll OMG it will take me 10 years to read all I am adding to TBR- not buying yet-how long will that last with your posts!!!!! 7y
CouronneDhiver Yep, mine either. I totally joined this site thinking "don't get too carried away"... haha! Nope 7y
LitsyGoesPostal 😊😊 7y
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Flaneurette
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Ugh, I am so lame compared to all you guys! Epic reading slump illustrated 👎😭 #myyearinbooks #goodreads

Faibka No worries, I've barely finished 39 and ways away from my goal of 50 :( sometimes there's just not enough time! 😖 7y
Flaneurette Thanks @Faibka I could say it's because I have young children but really I haven't been able to concentrate, hopefully next year goes better 😜! 7y
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ElizabethSensa
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"How extraordinary - how wonderful! - it is that a lot of little black marks on paper can bring a person who died nearly two hundred years ago into your room: bring him so close that you know him much better than you would have known him if you met him in the flesh. It is extraordinary and it is enlarging." P 150

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BookishFeminist
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Pickpick

Delightful collection of memoir essays by lit giant Diana Athill. I hope I'm this coherent when I'm 98. For real, she wrote this from a retirement home. Athill has lived a full life & wants to share it with you. She is optimistic, honest, & engaging about her life & society. She puts her fist down on colonialism & talks candidly about abortion, miscarriage, aging, deciding to live in a retirement home, agency, relationships, & death. 🌼 #ReadWomen

shawnmooney Wow, this sounds totally up my alley! One of my favorite non-fiction reads this year has been 95-year-old New Yorker essayist (and step-son of E.B. White) Roger Angell's essays. 8y
Bibliogeekery I love that there are Doctor Who Mad Libs visible in the corner of this shot! 8y
BookishFeminist @shawnmooney I haven't heard of that one—thanks for the rec! I'll check it out. This sounds very similar. 😊 8y
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BookishFeminist @Bibliogeekery You Litsyers never cease to amaze me with your attention to detail! Love my Doctor Who madlibs. 🤗 8y
Trav Doctor Who ❤️❤️ 8y
BookishFeminist @Trav it's just the best geeky thing! ❤️🌀 8y
Bibliogeekery Ha! Definitely have hawk eyes! I also love Madlibs a lot so was happy to see the, peeking out in the corner! 8y
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BookishFeminist
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"How extraordinary – how wonderful! – it is that a lot of little black marks on paper can bring a person who died nearly two hundred years ago into your room: bring him so close that you know him much better than you would have known him if you met him in the flesh. It is extraordinary and it is enlarging." —Diana Athill, on the power of books & how much they mean to her. ?? #ReadWomen #BookQuotes

WordWaller 💖 8y
sprainedbrain ❤️❤️❤️❤️ 8y
Trav Love love this! 8y
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TrulyBookish Love the way you've framed this! 8y
Bibliogeekery Great quote! 8y
DivineDiana So true! 8y
BookishFeminist @TrulyBookish Thank you!! I was pretty proud of it but it took way longer than i'd care to admit. 😳 8y
BookishFeminist @Bibliogeekery @DivineDiana It is!! Athill has a way with words & fascinating perspective that makes me want to go read her other stuff. 8y
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