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The Vagabond Lover
Contributor(s): O'Connor, Garry (Author)
ISBN: 1902086198     ISBN-13: 9781902086194
Publisher: Centrehouse Press
OUR PRICE:   $15.29  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: September 2018
* Not available - Not in print at this time *
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Personal Memoirs
- Performing Arts | Theater - Stagecraft & Scenography
- Music | Individual Composer & Musician
Physical Information: 0.62" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (0.92 lbs) 296 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Cavan O'Connor was born into near destitution in Nottingham in 1899, but quickly rose to become the legendary 'Vagabond of Song'. He was one of the most famous singing legends of his era. He topped Variety bills. He was an adventurer, who cut a swashbuckling figure. In the golden age of radio, his broadcasts reached listening figures of over thirteen million. With his flawless tenor voice his status was as latter-day troubadour, a star of stage imitated by romantics young and old all over the civilised world. But what lay behind the idealised celebrity? Was he a gift from God, or a flawed, vulnerable being like the rest of us? Enter the writer son Garry O'Connor, who answers that question emphatically. In his memoir The Vagabond Lover, the father-son dispute unveils without sentimentality the general mess of domestic and family life, of which Cavan was the head. Revealed - in this searing, honest, dark revelation - are the miserable depths the sweet singer of lyrical song plumbed, and remorselessly so. O'Connor fils does not spare the reader, refusing to gloss over the traumas and crises of family conflict, as they run in parallel with his own fortunes and vicissitudes. He is dispassionate with the biographical detail, yet impassioned enough to recall one of his own plays, penned in his Cambridge youth, where the father Cavan is reimagined. In fiction as in life he is cast as the pivotal character in a family drama painful in its climaxes. Overarching is a first ever account of those Cambridge years, peopled with familiar icons of twenty-first-century culture. It's a fast-moving, two-pronged probe into the nature of celebrity, arriving at a profound resolution as the author shrugs off the flaws and setbacks packaged as part of the celebrity deal.