The Favorite Game

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Wayne
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The Favorite Game

Post by Wayne »

started reading this book a week ago.

I hear it's semiautobiographical.

Anyone know how much of it is fact or fiction?
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Energized_Slave
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Post by Energized_Slave »

I like to think that it is, since it's probably my favourite book (pardon the pun). Like anything, there probably is enough to be considered semi-autobiographical and there's probably enough to fall over to the side of fiction as well.

Either way, enjoy it and let us all know what you thought of it.
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tom.d.stiller
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Post by tom.d.stiller »

Welcome to the forum, Wayne. Please feel at home.

Energized_Slave, I know that TFG has been described as "semi-autobiographical", but I think it's as autobiographical as Oscar's "Picture of Dorian Gray" was. The author has lived through most of the essential sequences, but he changed them to achieve a literary purpose, and he invented others to stress his points...

Breavman is Leonard, but Leonard is not Breavman, not in a lifetime... Some idiosyncracies Leonard aid off like old clothes by writing TFG.

So Breavman is part of what LC once was.

Tom
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linmag
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Post by linmag »

When asked something along those lines, Leonard once said (and I paraphrase!) that he and Breavman shared some of the same experiences, but they reacted to them differently, so grew into two different men. In other words, Leonard drew on some of his own experience for particular incidents, but Breavman is not Leonard.
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1972: Leeds, 2008: Manchester, Lyon, London O2, 2009: Wet Weybridge, 2012: Hop Farm/Wembley Arena
catherine
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Post by catherine »

Do you think Leonard would have liked to become more like Breavman?
Because Breavman's perspective at the end of the book seems to be
that of a very independent young man who is going to rise above things such as women trouble and emotional chaos quite easily.
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tom.d.stiller
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Post by tom.d.stiller »

Caroline, I believe Leonard is glad enough to have grown into his own self. But probably there will have been times, when he regretted not to have chosen a different path...
I reckon that's the normal way lives go...

Tom
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linda_lakeside
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Post by linda_lakeside »

That is certainly the way my life went. Being Breavman never entered my mind, either. :roll: :wink:
~ The smell of perfume in the air, bits of beauty everywhere ~ Leonard Cohen.
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tom.d.stiller
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Post by tom.d.stiller »

maybe Breavwomen? :wink:
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linda_lakeside
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Post by linda_lakeside »

Perhaps in the singular sense? No, even then I'd feel out of place.

Linda.
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tom.d.stiller
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Post by tom.d.stiller »

forgive me the typo, i never ever thought of you as a committee of lindas...
:)
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Anne-Marie
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Post by Anne-Marie »

The young boy who got killed at camp is fiction, though the boy was based on a real character.

Mostly everything in the book is based on actual people and events.

I love that book. I become so engrossed reading it.
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linda_lakeside
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Post by linda_lakeside »

I first read Favourite Game a long time ago. Then about a year ago, I bought a 'fresh' copy and read it on the bus back to my present abode. Now, as much as I love it, I won't need to read it for another however many years. Beautiful Losers was a more difficult read for me. Eg. I probably wouldn't have finished it on the bus.
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