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Spike Milligan, 1971
Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall
Spike Milligan, 1971
GenevaBookClub: In this, the first of Spike Milligan's uproarious recollections of life in the army, our hero takes us from the outbreak of war in 1939 ('it must have been something we said'), through his attempts to avoid enlistment ('time for my appendicitus, I thought') and his gunner training in Bexhill ('There was one drawback. No ammunition') to the landing at Algiers in 1943 ('I closed my eyes and faced the sun. I fell down a hatchway'). Filled with bathos, pathos and gales of ribald laughter, this is a barely sane helping of military goonery and superlative Milliganese.
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Margo Jefferson, 2015
Negroland
Margo Jefferson, 2015
GenevaBookClub: Margo Jefferson is a 73 year old journalist and academic. This is her autobiography.
She writes as a wealthy, privileged, highly educated member of the elite social caste of African Americans, but with a very charming, self-critical eye and an easy style. She reveals how privileged African Americans blend into the worlds of both African Americans and privileged European Americans. It is like a series of conversations with a best friend. 256 pages, published in 2016. Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award 2016.
Negroland: A Memoir is a 2015 book by Margo Jefferson. It is a memoir of growing up in 1950s and 1960s America within a small, privileged segment of black American society known as the black bourgeoisie, or African-American upper class.
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Ernesto Che Guevara, 2004
The Motorcycle Diaries
Ernesto Che Guevara, 2004
GenevaBookClub: A memoir that traces the early travels of Marxist revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara, then a 23-year-old medical student, and his friend Alberto Granado, a 29-year-old biochemist. Leaving Buenos Aires, Argentina, in January 1952 on the back of a sputtering single cylinder 1939 Norton 500cc dubbed La Poderosa ("The Mighty One"), they desired to explore the South America they only knew from books. During the formative odyssey Guevara is transformed by witnessing the social injustices of exploited mine workers, persecuted communists, ostracized lepers, and the tattered descendants of a once-great Inca civilization. By journey's end, they had travelled for a symbolic nine months by motorcycle, steamship, raft, horse, bus, and hitchhiking, covering more than 8,000 kilometres.
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