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The Blaze of Obscurity

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The Blaze of Obscurity

By: Clive James
Narrated by: Clive James
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About this listen

Read by the author, Clive James.

In the 1980s, Clive James found his way into full-time television. In The Blaze of Obscurity, his fifth book of memoir, he delivers the inside story. A hilarious, thoughtful, warts and all account of a life in the public eye.

As his fame grew, Clive James was never alone – except in the toilet. But there, cubicle walls provided little protection against young men, standing at urinals, talking behind his back:

Jesus, he's looking rough.

And it's only Monday.

Taking it in his stride and batting away accusations of selling out, Clive James was in television for the adventure. And an adventure it was. Rollicking through the end of one century and the beginning of the next, he interviews Hefner and Hepburn, Frank Sinatra and Françoise Sagan, Peter Ustinov ('even his nose could act') and Ronald Reagan. He explores the Las Vegas Grand Prix and the Louisville Kentucky Holiday Inn talent pageant, sends Postcards from Kenya, Shanghai, Tokyo and Dallas, interprets the news, discovers the first bizarre examples of what has come to be known as reality TV, and promotes the career of the irrepressible Margarita Pracatan – all told here with his trademark humour and thoughtful erudition.

The Blaze of Obscurity is the fifth and final book of memoir from Clive James.

©2009 Clive James (P)2009 Macmillan Digital Audio
Entertainment & Celebrities Celebrity Comedy

Critic Reviews

'Clive James is an intellectual as well as a joker, a wise man as well as a wit' – Observer

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farewell

short but very sweet with a few great laughs worth waiting for and I will seek his other works of art

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Close to Stylistic perfection by a master

James, despite his fame as a broadcaster took his writing very seriously. So seriously I fact that he made it look effortless. His account of his years in front of the TV camera is informative, amusing and beautifully constructed. His sentences reverberate in the air like phrases from one of Mozart’s later piano sonatas. They have balance that seems fragile and delicate but in fact could probably hold the weight of the harbour bridge of his birthplace.
His account of making “Postcard from Berlin” is very moving and the final paragraphs of the series are quite profound. His was a poetic sensibility. He is sorely missed.

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