| Vendor | |
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Liepman Literary Agency
Marc Koralnik |
| Original language | |
| English | |
SIXTY
The Beginning of the End or the End of the Beginning?
From the author of the award-winning The Boy in the Moon comes a wickedly honest and brutally funny account of the year in which Ian Brown truly realized that the man in the mirror was actually...sixty.
Sixty is a report from the front, a dispatch from the Maginot Line that divides the middle-aged from the soon to be elderly. As Ian writes, "It is the age when the body begins to dominate the mind, or vice versa, when time begins to disappear and loom, but never in a good way, when you have no choice but to admit that people have stopped looking your way, and that in fact they stopped twenty years ago."
Ian began keeping a diary with a Facebook post on the morning of February 4, 2014, his sixtieth birthday. As well as keeping a running tally on how he survived the year, Ian explored what being sixty means physically, psychologically and intellectually. "What pleasures are gone forever? Which ones, if any, are left? What did Beethoven, or Schubert, or Jagger, or Henry Moore, or Lucien Freud do after they turned sixty?" And most importantly, "How much life can you live in the fourth quarter, not knowing when the game might end?"
With formidable candour, he tries to answer this question: "Does aging and elderliness deserve to be dreaded--and how much of that dread can be held at bay by a reasonable human being?" For that matter, for a man of sixty, what even constitutes reasonableness?
IAN BROWN is an author and a feature writer for The Globe and Mail whose work has won a total of nine Gold National Magazine and National Newspaper awards. His most recent book, The Boy in the Moon, about his disabled son, Walker, was a New York Times Top 10 Book of 2011, a #1 national bestseller, and won the 2010 Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction, the British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, Ontario's Trillium Prize for Non-Fiction, and was a finalist for the 2010 Governor General's Literary Award. It has been published in nine countries. Brown lives in Toronto.
Ian began keeping a diary with a Facebook post on the morning of February 4, 2014, his sixtieth birthday. As well as keeping a running tally on how he survived the year, Ian explored what being sixty means physically, psychologically and intellectually. "What pleasures are gone forever? Which ones, if any, are left? What did Beethoven, or Schubert, or Jagger, or Henry Moore, or Lucien Freud do after they turned sixty?" And most importantly, "How much life can you live in the fourth quarter, not knowing when the game might end?"
With formidable candour, he tries to answer this question: "Does aging and elderliness deserve to be dreaded--and how much of that dread can be held at bay by a reasonable human being?" For that matter, for a man of sixty, what even constitutes reasonableness?
IAN BROWN is an author and a feature writer for The Globe and Mail whose work has won a total of nine Gold National Magazine and National Newspaper awards. His most recent book, The Boy in the Moon, about his disabled son, Walker, was a New York Times Top 10 Book of 2011, a #1 national bestseller, and won the 2010 Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction, the British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, Ontario's Trillium Prize for Non-Fiction, and was a finalist for the 2010 Governor General's Literary Award. It has been published in nine countries. Brown lives in Toronto.
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Book
Published 2015-09-01 by Random House |