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The Death of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son

di Pat Conroy

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
5363345,542 (3.81)23
Biography & Autobiography. Military. Nonfiction. HTML:NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER  A brilliant storyteller, a master of sarcasm, and a hallucinatory stylist whose obsession with the impress of the past on the present binds him to Southern literary tradition.The Boston Globe 
 
Pat Conroys great success as a writer has always been intimately linked with the exploration of his family history. As the oldest of seven children who were dragged from military base to military base across the South, Pat bore witness to the often cruel and violent behavior of his father, Marine Corps fighter pilot Donald Patrick Conroy. While the publication of The Great Santini brought Pat much acclaim, the rift it caused brought even more attention, fracturing an already battered family. But as Pat tenderly chronicles here, even the oldest of wounds can heal. In the final years of Don Conroys life, the Santini unexpectedly refocused his ire to defend his sons honor.
 
The Death of Santini is a heart-wrenching act of reckoning whose ultimate conclusion is that love can soften even the meanest of men, lending significance to the oft-quoted line from Pats novel The Prince of Tides: In families there are no crimes beyond forgiveness.
 
Praise for The Death of Santini
 
A painful, lyrical, addictive read that [Pat Conroys] fans wont want to miss.People
 
Conroys conviction pulls you fleetly through the book, as does the potency of his bond with his family, no matter their sins.The New York Times Book Review
 
Vital, large-hearted and often raucously funny.The Washington Post
 
Conroy writes athletically and beautifully, slicing through painful memories like a point guard splitting the defense.Minneapolis Star Tribune.
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Although this story is purportedly about Don Conroy, the father of Pat Conroy who became the abusive military father as the main character in the former’s novel [The Great Santini], it was really about the author’s whole family from his own perspective. Brutally honest in its tone, it would be more than I would want revealed in a novel about me if I were one of its characters, but this author can wring such beauty and life out of words he writes, that I might overlook this were it me. My only tiny criticism is that I found some facts in the story repetitive, but as a whole it was heartening to read about what could have been a total failed relationship with Pat’s dad to have ended up as a recovered one. Sadly, the same could not be said about Pat’s relationship with one of his his sisters, Carol Anne.

I’ve always loved Pat Conroy’s writing and enjoyed reading this book although some of the topics he discussed were deeply sad or made me uncomfortable. I have developed a greater understanding of the man who has always been one of my favorite writers. I came to learn why he developed certain characteristics such as sensitivity for others as well as realize to what great extent his novels were based on his own life and inner pain. I am only sorry that he is no longer alive and can no longer fill pages with his colorful thoughts and emotionally-provoking stories. ( )
  SqueakyChu | Nov 26, 2022 |
I enjoyed listening to this book about Pat Conroy's dad and his relationship with him. It was an awful childhood, and I think he had some of his father's personality in him. He could have easily written off his dad, but he didn't. He continued to have a relationship with him and over time they became close. I truly believe that by the end he actually loved him. ( )
  lynnski723 | Aug 6, 2020 |
This might be the last Pat Conroy book I have to read. Although I have thoroughly enjoyed all of them because of the beautiful writing, I have to admit, the Conroy family, at least through Pat’s stories, has worn me out. If you look up the word “dysfunctional” in the dictionary, you will see a family picture of the Conroys.
I taught high school English for 40 years; Pat lasted a mere three, as I remember, and that’s a shame because as good a writer as he was, he would have been a marvelous teacher.
I’m sorry that I’m out of Pat Conroy books to read. There’s only one thing left to do: start reading them again. ( )
  FormerEnglishTeacher | Oct 26, 2019 |
I’ve heard this book described as a sequel to The Great Santini but it is more apt to call it the real story behind The Great Santini. The level of dysfunction gets tedious after a while. Conroy's tone starts to sound like whining--I thought that the book was complete after two hours...imagine my surprise to find out it goes on for another ten or so. My first Conroy book--maybe, I'll do another--maybe just watch the movie? ( )
  buffalogr | Mar 31, 2018 |
Pat Conroy’s classic southern novel The Great Santini is, in the words of the author, the story of his own family growing up as the children of a Marine Corps colonel and a sharecropper’s granddaughter. In his penultimate book, The Death of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son, Conroy describes his actual life with his family and his father, Marine fighter pilot Col. Don Conroy, the original Great Santini. This nickname even appears on his military gravestone at the National Cemetery in Beaufort, South Carolina.

I’ve heard this book described as a sequel to The Great Santini but it is more apt to call it the real story behind The Great Santini. One does, of course need to take such statements with a grain of salt, especially when dealing with published authors. I learned a lot about Pat Conroy from reading both books, this one especially, but I believe I learned as much by reading between the lines as I did reading Pat’s stories. It was obvious that everyone in the Conroy family became masters in the art of domestic survival and other forms of passive aggressive behavior. Every interaction they had with anyone was, first and foremost, a defensive maneuver. No statement was ever taken at face value. Everything said was carefully examined for subtext that could conceal a verbal attack. It’s no wonder that most of the Conroy kids considered suicide and Tom, the youngest son, unfortunately did.
I was particularly interested to read about how the family got on after Santini was published. While Col. Conroy was at first enraged by the book he soon realized that it was his ticket to fame and he embraced the roll, getting a custom license plate reading SANTINI and attending book signings with his son and gloating when his autograph line was longer than Pat’s.

I usually read two books at one time, one text and one audio and often make sure the books are of different genres so that I don’t mix them up in my head. This time, though, I read The Great Santini while listening to the audio version of The Death of Santini. The experience was a bit confusing but overall it was fascinating. It reminded me of “Ghosts of History” a website where images of soldiers from past wars are superimposed over recent photograph of the same location. It also showed me how actual people from Pat’s life became characters in his novels. Bernie Schein, Conroy’s best friend from high school can be none other than Sammy Wertzberger in Santini.

Bottom line: Having read both books I feel like I have an almost three-dimensional view of the Conroy family and of Pat Conroy in particular. He was a magnificent writer who took to heart more than anyone else Ernest Hemingway's statement that “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.” ( )
  Unkletom | Jun 17, 2017 |
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I’ve been writing the story of my own life for over forty years.
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It became a credo for my entire writing life—if I feared putting something on paper, it was a voice screaming from the interior for me to start writing it down, to leave nothing out.
When his escargot came, Dad stared at it as if I’d ordered him a plate full of roaches.
My mother hated the inglorious, indefensible racism of the South she was born into, and so did Stanny. It makes no sense except for that nameless black sharecropper and his wife, who heard about four whites kids abandoned by their mother in the middle of the worst Depression in history and saved these children with the fruit of their labors and the unforgettable kindness of their hearts. Because my mother and Stanny both loathed the apartheid South, I consider myself the luckiest whites boy who ever grew up beneath the burning sun of Dixie.
My mom would decipher Stanny’s preposterous handwriting like a mouse has it’s tiny feet painted with blue ink and had run back and forth on a blank page.
“Hey, priest,” I said, “are you fucking my mom?”

“No, of course not,” he said, outraged.

“My brothers and sisters think you are.”  

“They’re wrong, and you’re a horse’s ass to even ask the question,” said the bristling Father Dave.
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Biography & Autobiography. Military. Nonfiction. HTML:NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER  A brilliant storyteller, a master of sarcasm, and a hallucinatory stylist whose obsession with the impress of the past on the present binds him to Southern literary tradition.The Boston Globe 
 
Pat Conroys great success as a writer has always been intimately linked with the exploration of his family history. As the oldest of seven children who were dragged from military base to military base across the South, Pat bore witness to the often cruel and violent behavior of his father, Marine Corps fighter pilot Donald Patrick Conroy. While the publication of The Great Santini brought Pat much acclaim, the rift it caused brought even more attention, fracturing an already battered family. But as Pat tenderly chronicles here, even the oldest of wounds can heal. In the final years of Don Conroys life, the Santini unexpectedly refocused his ire to defend his sons honor.
 
The Death of Santini is a heart-wrenching act of reckoning whose ultimate conclusion is that love can soften even the meanest of men, lending significance to the oft-quoted line from Pats novel The Prince of Tides: In families there are no crimes beyond forgiveness.
 
Praise for The Death of Santini
 
A painful, lyrical, addictive read that [Pat Conroys] fans wont want to miss.People
 
Conroys conviction pulls you fleetly through the book, as does the potency of his bond with his family, no matter their sins.The New York Times Book Review
 
Vital, large-hearted and often raucously funny.The Washington Post
 
Conroy writes athletically and beautifully, slicing through painful memories like a point guard splitting the defense.Minneapolis Star Tribune.

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