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A Train through Time: A Life, Real and Imagined

de Elizabeth Farnsworth

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"It has been a long time since I read a book so moving, plainspoken, and beautiful." --Michael Chabon, Pulitzer Prize winner and author ofMoonglow How much of our memory is constructed by imagination? And how does memory shape our lives? As a nine-year-old, Elizabeth Farnsworth struggled to understand the loss of her mother. On a cross-country trip with her father, the heartsick child searches for her mother at train stations along the way. Even more, she confronts mysteries: death, time, and a locked compartment on the train. Weaving a child's experiences with memories from reporting in danger zones like Cambodia and Iraq, Farnsworth explores how she came to cover mass death and disaster. While she never breaks the tone of a curious investigator, she easily moves between her nine-year-old self and the experienced journalist. She openly confronts the impact of her childhood on the route her life has taken. And, as she provides one beautifully crafted depiction after another, we share her journey, coming to know the acclaimed reporter as she discovers herself.… (mais)
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I won this in a GOODREADS giveaway -A Train through Time: A Life, Real and Imagined by Elizabeth Farnsworth -- wonderful little book of storys and adventures. Highly recomend. ( )
  tenamouse67 | Jan 6, 2018 |
When Elizabeth was a nine year old girl, her mother died from cancer, but she was told her mother went away. Not understanding the real meaning she searched at every stop on a train trip she took with her father from Topeka to San Francisco, for her mother. She also imbues this train trip with some imaginative features, tying together memory with imagination.

Alternating with this trip she talks about her later life job as chief correspondent for the Jim Lehrer News hour on PBS. A job that took her to the dangerous hotspots around the world, Haiti, Chile and Allende's run for President. After Pinochet's death she met with the family members, or those who were left, of the disappeared. Iraq after the fall of Saddam. So many dangerous places, places where she felt the world needed to know, places that by exposing what was really going on she could share and show she cared.

The writing, the tone is almost surrealistic, the prose almost poetic at times. Not a straightforward telling but a blend of fact and fantasy. I seem to respond well to books written like this, love the sense of discovery with which they are presented. She does tell us what was real or not about her train trip at book's end. All the pages about her professional life were true. Merging the difficult parts of her life together, one as a young girl, later a professional news correspondent dovetailed nicely, in my opinion, in giving Tue reader a well rounded, of short, glimpse of the, life of this remarkable woman. ( )
  Beamis12 | Mar 2, 2017 |
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"It has been a long time since I read a book so moving, plainspoken, and beautiful." --Michael Chabon, Pulitzer Prize winner and author ofMoonglow How much of our memory is constructed by imagination? And how does memory shape our lives? As a nine-year-old, Elizabeth Farnsworth struggled to understand the loss of her mother. On a cross-country trip with her father, the heartsick child searches for her mother at train stations along the way. Even more, she confronts mysteries: death, time, and a locked compartment on the train. Weaving a child's experiences with memories from reporting in danger zones like Cambodia and Iraq, Farnsworth explores how she came to cover mass death and disaster. While she never breaks the tone of a curious investigator, she easily moves between her nine-year-old self and the experienced journalist. She openly confronts the impact of her childhood on the route her life has taken. And, as she provides one beautifully crafted depiction after another, we share her journey, coming to know the acclaimed reporter as she discovers herself.

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