Peter O'Toole Books
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Great Avtor, Great Writer...Who Knew?Review Date: 2007-01-25
Genuine atmosphere of the late 40s.Review Date: 2000-01-25
Fascinating autobiographical account of O'Toole's childhood.Review Date: 1998-10-05
His narrative style can a times be a bit disjointed, but the overall picture is wonderful. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.
goodReview Date: 2001-04-15
The classic and the modern.Review Date: 2000-04-27


O'Toole Amazing life in His Own Delightful WordsReview Date: 2007-01-25
And this is Volume Two! Do grab the first book, "Loitering With Intent: The Child." It is not only a fascinating story of the very early years of O'Toole's boyhood in Ireland, it is also a personal account of the world plunging into the chaos of the 1930s that became World War II.
Read them both...preferasbly in order. And pray Mr O'Toole is with us long enough to craft volume three!
Brilliant 2nd. volume of O'Toole's biography.Review Date: 1999-06-08
hit and missReview Date: 1998-04-24
The Peter (O'Toole) prescription for a life well lived!Review Date: 2003-08-26
Brilliantly written and very funnyReview Date: 1998-11-22
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'O Toole is a fascinating subject and this bio keeps him that way !Review Date: 2007-01-09
Additionally, there's plenty to look at as well:photos covering the whole spectrum (up to '82) of Peter 'O Toole's life and his illustrious and fascinating career.

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Great writing as alwaysReview Date: 2007-01-12

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A sensible woman of a life valiantly livedReview Date: 2005-07-07
Between a tone of "I had The Life" and purge sessions by an anorexic depressive, Phillips opts for the Sensible Survivor tradition of celeb bios. The underlying theme is a willing but unhappy submissive to a talented but Jekyll-Hyde husband, and the tough sell of female, married professional in 60s England.
On a larger scale, this outlines the operations of a modest but robust creative force (Keep Films run by Jules Buck/O'Toole families) in 60s-70s, during the waning studio system and before the advent of 80s high-concept blockbuster swamped out the maverick, artsy tirades of the 70s.
Fascinating!Review Date: 2003-12-29
As for the reviewer who complained that there was nothing about her childhood in Wales - the reason is simple. This is the second part of her autobiography. Her life in Wales and her early days in London - up to the time she met Peter O'Toole - was beautifully told in the first book - "Private Faces" which was never released in this country, but which you can get through amazon.co.uk. It too is a fascinating story, since I doubt very many of us can even imagine what it would be like growing up in a very rural part of Wales.
I can't recommend this book highly enough - if only for more people to discover this amazinglybeautiful and talented woman.
Better than commented onReview Date: 2004-03-13
The book covers not only her stage career and O'Toole relationship, but her thoughts and feelings about both and many other aspects over about a 40 year period.It is an intimate commentary on what she was going through from day, week, month and year onward.
For the comment that O'Toole wrote a good book... that is rubbish. He can't hold a candle to her as a writer. His "style" is awful. A poor man's James Joyce! And Joyce was bad enough himself.
Delicious Stories of an Adventurous LifeReview Date: 2003-12-09
I wanted more dirtReview Date: 2004-03-02
And what about O'Toole's drinking? As one of the most famous drunk actors of all time, in the league of Lee Marvin, Burton, Oliver Reed and Richard Harris, I expected some fireworks in this area. Forget it. Sian clinically describes Peter's addictions, his out of control lifestyle and racing cars, but it's all told in a desperately dry manner. All very disappointing.
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disjointedReview Date: 2003-03-14
Immensely enjoyable, if truncated, autobiographyReview Date: 2003-10-14
O'Toole's recollections of his parents--a gorgeous, flirtatious mother and a handsome, ne'er-do-well father--are rich with detail and emotion. He remembers also their friends, their tribulations (and pet mouse!) during WWII, and perhaps most vividly of all, his enforced sojourn in the English countryside when city life was deemed too dangerous for children. His account of going to church and going to a Protestant school (O'Toole was reared a good Irish Catholic boy) are especially hilarious, from the fights with bullies to the strict teachers to the sad family with whom he lodged. One especially funny tale has to do with a school picnic. When the Protestant teacher instructs the class to pray for good weather for the picnic, they all promise to. Of course picnic day arrives and is rainy. The teacher disapprovingly sniffs, "Well, I see God didn't answer our prayers." O'Toole, eight years old and astounded by this non-Catholic outlook, cries out, "Yes, He did! He said no!"
Young O'Toole is obsessed with Adolf Hitler, who makes an appearance every several dozen pages. O'Toole gets at the maniacal dictator's fascination for a young, feverishly imaginative boy with some extraordinary stream-of-consciousness writing:
"Hitler had been poison-gassed [in WWI]. Daring despatch runner that he was, twice he was got. Shrapnel swept a bit of his shin away. After two years of carnage, fighting trench warfare at the front, he was got. Into beetroot fields. stream bottoms, slag heaps, pitheads, broken smoking juts of towns and villages, burning vanished woodlands, into downs and rides and hillsides, the trenches had been dug deep down into the mud and earth . . . hydra-headed, destroyed, constantly relocated, these barbarous earthworks moved and split the countrysides of France and Belgium. Six million soldiers hopped off sandbag parapets and were killed. Many miles of no man's lands ran between the Allied and the German trenchlines, they, too, dying and being reborn in other fields. Barbed-wire gardens to crouch in and be killed."
If only the book explored more of O'Toole's life as a world-renowned actor . . . but it doesn't. It stops shortly after the war and we must all hope that he soon writes a follow-up volume. Had he not been an actor, Peter O'Toole could have made a splendid career as a writer. Thoroughly enjoyable!

InformativeReview Date: 1998-08-01
Related Subjects: Movies
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As enthralling as this story is, the writing in this book are every syllable as deliscious and enjoyable as the life in these stories. The biggest surprise is that the subject of these pages, Peter O'Toole, is also the author! As it turns out, Mr O'Toole is as superlative a writer as he is gifted on the stage and screen as an actor. Who knew?
The best news of all: this is volume one. Read it and then rush out and grab volume II, "Lotering With Intent: The Apprentice."