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  #11  
Unread 05-27-2013, 09:19 AM
Adrian Fry Adrian Fry is offline
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You will learn here that I was born, but not the irrelevant details of how or to whom. Similarly, the act of authorship furnishes sufficient proof that I received an education not to require superfluous corroboration through childhood reminiscences concerning the eccentricities of the staff and students with whom I interacted. Over my private life, I make no apology for drawing a veil. Some, given my long career in politics and public administration, might be tempted to provide ‘off the record’ insights; my record speaks for itself. So as not to prejudice public opinion of the still active individuals and organisations for which and with whom I have worked, I will say nothing. Of those individuals and organisations now deceased or defunct, I intend less to speak no ill than not to speak at all. Of my times, Posterity must be the final judge. These considerations aside, I intend utter candour.
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  #12  
Unread 05-27-2013, 09:31 AM
Roger Slater Roger Slater is offline
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"When I was a young man, I fell into a coma that lasted twenty-seven years. I recall no dreams, no sensation whatsoever. Though volunteers occasionally read to me or held my hand in the off-chance that something was getting through, nothing did. For the next three hundred pages of this memoir, I will elaborate more specifically on my experiences during the first nine years of my coma."
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  #13  
Unread 05-28-2013, 10:38 AM
Graham King Graham King is offline
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"Before plunging in, do just tease yourself with my delicious chapter titles!
‘How His Holiness misread my intent and I forgave’… ‘Her Majesty’s demeanour on seventeen occasions, interpreted’… ’Those gibes repudiated in full’ (Oo, you know you’ve been itching!)… ‘Relative misdemeanours’ (need I say more?! I do)… ‘My children keep me grounded– and I return the favour!’… and finally– at least for this present volume!- ‘***My glorious road to immortal fame***’ (and yes, I’m humble enough to know I’m still on it!)
As a special bonus, this is the world’s first truly interactive memoir: I’ll be including all the questions fans posted on my homey-pagey-o. Yes, ALL of them!
-Of course I may not answer them here, but the probing curiosity of my ever-budgeoning (what a great word!) tribe of devotees deserves to be at least acknowledged, if not- and how could it ever be?- fully sated!
Joys, Huggies!"
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  #14  
Unread 05-28-2013, 02:03 PM
Peter Goulding Peter Goulding is offline
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OMG, I can’t believe I’m writing my autobiography! This is truly awesome! Some people might say that nineteen is too young to be writing your life story but I’ve crammed so much into my life already that I, like, owe it to everyone who has made me the celebrity I am today. Hold tight, because this is going to be a roller-coaster ride of a story about my unhappy childhood (they wouldn’t let me wear high heels in school), the trauma when my great-grandmother in Australia died, my X Factor audition, my heartbreak at missing out on pop stardom, my drink and drugs hell and finally my rehabilitation as a world famous Shopping Channel presenter. Yes, I was educated in the school of hard knocks but it has helped to make me what I am today. I am sure you’ll find this story uplifting and inspirational.
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  #15  
Unread 05-29-2013, 07:52 AM
Charlie Southerland Charlie Southerland is offline
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Barack Obama


Out of Africa.
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  #16  
Unread 05-29-2013, 08:51 AM
Roger Slater Roger Slater is offline
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Why did the fireman wear red suspenders? The answer, of course, is to get to the other side. And why did the chicken cross the road? To hold his pants up. You see what I've done? I've reversed two familiar jokes, confounding your expectations, and in the process they have each been given what I like to call a "comedic transfusion," the anemic blood of one proving to be the life-saving (or should I say, ha ha, the laugh-saving) elixir of the other. I am a comedy writer, though no one has yet to pay me for my gifts. What follows is the story of my life. Why should you read it? To hold up your pants, of course!
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  #17  
Unread 05-29-2013, 12:16 PM
Adrian Fry Adrian Fry is offline
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In 1974, I saw the acclaimed humourist Basil Boothroyd buying a spirit level. It's the sort of thing that's always happening in my life;, the vouchsafing to yours truly of some small but resonant insight into the lives of the great and the good. I'd feel remiss in my duty as a human being if I didn't stop to pass on said insights, each contextualised with an account of the twists in my own small career.
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  #18  
Unread 05-29-2013, 02:26 PM
Roger Slater Roger Slater is offline
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If you a looking for a well-written memoir with an interesting history to relate, then put down this book immediately. No, writing's not my thing, and if it were, I'd have nothing to write about since my life has been dull, and even if my life hadn't been dull, I'd refuse to boast about my accomplishments like some of those snooty bios where people say stuff like, "Oooh! Look at me! I was Prime Minister of England!" Or "Oooh! Look at me! I cured a disease!" I wasn't prime minister of anything and I never cured anything, not even a slab of meat, and I resent it when other people tell me they're better than I am. Bastards.
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  #19  
Unread 05-29-2013, 05:44 PM
Graham King Graham King is offline
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Default A little learning

‘To sleep, perchance to dream – that is the question.’ Little I dreamed, last year, to publish my memoirs, this; but life’s like that, overnight wringing the changes from yesterday’s expectations to reality of tomorrow. Besides: dreamed, or dreamt? Dreamt exists, but is it right? It’s such a funny word; there’s a sort of ghostly ‘p’ there (the opposite of a silent ‘p’ as in pterodactyl): ‘dreampt’, one can’t help saying, and almost beholds it hovering before one’s eyes, like Hamlet’s sceptre before the troubled Banquet. Spectre, I mean; witness what happened there? One of those Froudian spills, an elf in the brain! Dr Johnson knew all about it with his ‘queer old dean’ and such. Anyhow, I hope readers of these my three volumes (memoir sensu stricture, sundry sequelae, and commentary) will keep them beneath their pillows as companions for those hours betwixt sleeping and waking… ‘perchance to dream’ thereon.
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  #20  
Unread 05-29-2013, 06:07 PM
Roger Slater Roger Slater is offline
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When I was just a kid I used to go to bed super early. Sometimes, after I blew out the candle, my eyes would close almost immediately, and then maybe a half hour later I'd wake up thinking it was time to go to sleep, and I'd try to put down the book I imagined was still in my hands, though it wasn't, and blow out the candle I'd already blown out, thinking I hadn't. Little did I know that someday these memories would launch this, my 7,000 page memoir, "Looking For Time I Somehow Must Have Misplaced," told in the form of seven extremely lengthy sentences. This is sentence number five, leaving just two more, so hang onto your hats.
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