Anthony fingleton autobiography of a face

  • Consider the trajectory of Fingleton's life and meaning is restored to the cliché title of his autobiography and its 2003 film adaptation, “.
  • I bought this book after seeing the movie.
  • Anthony (Tony) Fingleton was abused physically and emotionally by his father.
  • A Game Enjoyed: An Autobiography - Peter May with Michael Melford

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    A Brief Stop on the Road from Auschwitz - Goran Rosenberg

    London: Granta Books, 2014, Hardback in Dust Wrapper £9.50


    A Captive of Time: My Years with Pasternak: The Memoirs of Olga Ivinskaya - Olga Ivinskaya

    London: Collins & Harvill Press, 1978, Hardback in Dust Wrapper £9.50


    A Cloud of Forgetting - Pamela Cooper

    London: Quartet Books, 1993, Hardback in Dust Wrapper £18.00


    A Detective's Story - George Hatherill

    London: Andre Deutsch, 1971, Hardback in Dust Wrapper £44.00


    A Few Kind Words and a Loaded Gun: The Autobiography of a Career Criminal - Razor Smith

    London: Viking, 2004, Hardback in Dust Wrapper £10.50


    A Fine Night for Tanks: The Road to Falaise - Ken Tout

    Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1998, Hardback in Dust Wrapper £12.50


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  • anthony fingleton autobiography of a face
  • 7/10

    Rush and Davis give bold performances in this true-life account of Aussie swimming champ Tony Fingleton.

    SWIMMING UPSTREAM (2005) *** Geoffrey Rush, Judy Davis, Jesse Spencer, Tim Draxl, David Hoflin, Craig Horner, Brittany Byrnes, Deborah Kennedy, Mark Hembrow, Mitchell Dellevergin, Thomas Davidson, Kain O'Keefe, Robert Quinn, Keeara Byrnes. (Dir: Russell Mulcahy)

    Rush and Davis give bold performances in this true-life account of Aussie swimming champ Tony Fingleton.

    Athletic biographies and films about sports in general seem to keep audiences enthralled as they line up to see them, rooting for the underdog and living vicariously through their triumphs as well as viscerally feeling their emotional (and physical) scars they accumulate in the long and winding road to success.

    In the latest true-life account the sport is swimming and the athlete is Australia's national champion Tony Fingleton circa the 1950s-early 1960s, beginning with his humble

    On the surface, Zailckas comes across as a typical young woman, working out with her college cheerleading team and pledging her sorority.

    Her sorority sisters are party girls (but aren't parties the reason people join a sorority?).

    She drinks in her dorm room with her buddies - it's so cold outside, what else are they supposed to do? (Study? Nah!) At a school like Syracuse University it's easy to amuse oneself with liquor, especially when the bars are just metres away from most Greek houses and fake IDs are passed around like lipstick.

    Zailckas stresses that heavy drinking among ung women has become so common and accepted that it doesn't seem like a big deal.

    She points out that the group mentality seems to be that it's perfectly OK to get wasted and wake up on the living room floor, just so long as you don't hurt anyone along the way.

    She writes: "The sisters think of the aggressive drunk as brutish, and as a result her penance fryst vatten long and difficult. She is nicknamed, '