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A Scrummy Book

by
October 2003, no. 255

‘A Life Worth Living' by Nicholas Shehadie

Simon & Schuster, $29.95 pb, 255 pp

A Scrummy Book

by
October 2003, no. 255

Not one word is wasted in Sir Nicholas Shehadie’s memoir, A Life Worth Living. Almost all the words are. This book is a triumph of lack of style over lack of substance. It’s a pity to attach such a proud word as ‘book’ to a publication like this, as it is to attach ‘music’ to two-fingered renditions of Chopsticks. Shehadie is no writer, nor does he pretend to be, which is a shame. A little pretence might have tricked up the work from being a tedious CV to a worthy member of Australia’s naïve school of sports memoirs, the current champion of which is Dawn Fraser’s energetic Dawn: One Hell of a Life (2001), with its patches of vivid, detailed recollection and clean, functional prose.

‘A Life Worth Living'

‘A Life Worth Living'

by Nicholas Shehadie

Simon & Schuster, $29.95 pb, 255 pp

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