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Book cover of My Father's Footprints
Family Relationships, Adult Children, Fatherhood, Death, Grief & Bereavement, Family Tragedies, U.S. Authors - 20th Century - Literary Biography, Baby Boom Generation

My Father's Footprints

by Colin McEnroe
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Overview

Starting with the death of his father and chronicling backwards, the author examines their relationship in order to understand his dad, not just as a father, but as a man.

Synopsis

Starting with the death of his father and chronicling backwards, the author examines their relationship in order to understand his dad, not just as a father, but as a man.

Hartford Courant, 7/21/03

When MY FATHER'S FOOTPRINTS sticks close to its hero, it does what those few very best memoirs do--through feeling, it makes sense of the incomprehensible.

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Editorials

Detroit Free Press, 7/21/03

please read MY FATHER'S FOOTPRINTS. Make the world safe for fathers and sons -- and newspaper writers -- like Colin McEnroe.

Hartford Courant, 7/21/03

When MY FATHER'S FOOTPRINTS sticks close to its hero, it does what those few very best memoirs do--through feeling, it makes sense of the incomprehensible.

Publishers Weekly

Examining male identity with mortality as a thematic backdrop, Hartford Courant columnist McEnroe (Swimming Chickens) offers a prismatic family portrait. Memories of his Connecticut childhood and fond flashbacks of his father, Bob, who faces death with "merriment and sadness," blur, refract and fade into present-day images of his adopted son, Joey. This sensitive and moving book-length expansion of an essay McEnroe wrote for Men's Health in 1999 will remind many of the life-affirming lessons taught in sportswriter Mitch Albom's Tuesdays with Morrie. McEnroe, a baby boomer, documents the dying days of his father, the playwright Robert E. McEnroe (1916-1998). At age seven, Colin found his calling as a humorist when he saw Eddie Foy Jr. on Broadway in his father's short-lived musical Donnybrook! (1961): "I just want to be that man, get those laughs." Yet he also saw Broadway's bright lights dim for his father, who wrote a stack of unpublished novels and unproduced plays (excerpted here) until he changed from acclaimed playwright into "an eccentric real estate agent" before his final curtain fell. McEnroe recalls all this with poignant phrasing, wit, wisdom and style. (July 16) Forecasts: A national print publicity campaign, Web marketing and ads in the New Yorker, the New York Times and Ruminator should draw in readers who adored Tuesdays with Morrie. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2003
Publisher
Hachette Book Group
Pages
212
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780446529334

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