Cider with Rosie
Completed

Book Details

Cider with Rosie

by Laurie Lee

Nonfiction Traditional
0
0 reviews

Genres

No genres listed.

Sign in to suggest genres for this book.

Platform

Traditional
Source: Open Library

Tags

Unofficial Tags

No unofficial tags.

Sign in to request tag additions or removals for this book.

Language

English
Browse books in this language

Publisher

N/A
Hosting Publisher

Release Year

May 25, 2000
First Released

Synopsis

Cider with Rosie is a wonderfully vivid memoir of childhood in a remote Cotswold village, a village before electricity and cars, a timeless place on the verge of change. Growing up amongst the fields and woods and characters of the place, Laurie Lee depicts a world that is both immediate and real and belongs to a now-distant past. 'It sings in the memory' Sunday Times Laurie Lee's matchless memories of his childhood, told in glittering prose and with a wonderfully wicked sense of comedy, have made Cider with Rosie one of the most famous of all autobiographies. One of eight children, Laurie Lee was born in 1914, in Slad, Gloucestershire, then a remote corner of England. As his father was absent, the large family -- five children from his father's first marriage and three from his second one -- was brought up by his capable mother. "We lived where he had left us; a relic of his provincial youth; a sprawling cumbersome, countrified brood too incongruous to carry with him; and I, for one, scarcely missed him. I was perfectly content in this world of women . . . bullied and tumbled through the hand-to-mouth days, patched or dressed-up, scolded, admired, swept off my feet in sudden passions of kisses, or dumped forgotten among the unwashed pots." Lee's memoir opens when he was just a baby younger than three years old and ends as he becomes a young man experiencing his first kiss. "I turned to look at Rosie. She was yellow and dusty with buttercups and seemed to be purring in the gloom; her hair was rich as a wild bee's nest and her eyes were full of stings. I did not know what to do about her, nor did I know what not to do. She looked smooth and precious, a thing of unplumbable mysteries, and perilous as quicksand." This beloved classic describes a lost world, a world reflecting the innocence and wonder of childhood, and illuminating an era without electricity or telephones. This is England on the cusp of the modern era, but it could have been anywhere. This may explain why Cider with Rosie became an instant bestseller when it was published in 1959, selling over six million copies in the UK alone, and continues to be read by children and adults all over the world. - Amazon (from The Midwest Book Review)

Reading Progress

Sign in to track your current chapter and mark books as completed.

Links

No reading links have been added for this book yet.

People Also Recommend

No popular bookshelves include this book yet.

Community Reviews

Sort by:

Want to share your thoughts?

Join the community to rate and review your favorite stories.

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Similar Books

Submit a Correction

Use this form for metadata problems, missing links, or anything that does not fit the dedicated genre and tag suggestion boxes. Admins will review it before changing the live page.

Please sign in to submit a correction request.