Immagine dell'autore.
33 opere 132 membri 3 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: w:Taki Theodoracopolous appearing on After Dark on 23 February 1991 in episode "Prisons: No Way Out". Other guests: w:Theodore Dalrymple, Paul Dolese, Sheila Heather-Hayes, Tony Lambrianou, Joe Whitty, Mary Eaton and Jim Wood. By Open Media Ltd - Open Media Ltd, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=63968521

Opere di Taki

High Life, Low Life (1981) 14 copie
High Life (1989) 6 copie
Βερονάλ (2015) 3 copie
Narkissos'un Düşüşü (1999) 2 copie
Le roman de Xénophon (2005) 2 copie

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Segnalato
marievictoire | Nov 9, 2023 |
Si vous aimez les chats, la philosophie, Athènes et les histoires loufoques ce livre est pour vous sinon passez votre chemin.
J'ai beaucoup aimé.
Les sept-ames comme héritiers des philosophes antiques chassés par la marchandisation du monde, bien vu, bien écrit, très agréable à lire.
 
Segnalato
PUautomne | May 23, 2013 |
Taki Theodoracopulos, who writes under the name 'Taki', was born in 1937 and is a scion of an extremely wealthy and well-connected Greek family. As a young man he participated in several sports at international level, and for a time was also a war correspondent. However, in both fields he was something of a dilettante, and his life has by and large been that of a playboy, his principal interests appearing to be yachts, good food and wine, and girls considerably younger than himself - almost entirely funded by his father. For many years he published a commentary on his own activities and those of his privileged social circle - not always portrayed in a flattering light - in journals such as The Spectator, where his 'High Life' column provided a counterbalance to Jeffrey Bernard's 'Low Life'. It is no surprise that Taki's political views are distinctly reactionary and right-wing, and that his opinion of the modern world is in brief that it, and its inhabitants, have all gone to pot. In particular, he has been an enthusiastic supporter of the law-and-order school of penal thinking, believing in the absolute rightness of tough treatment for criminals.

This life of wealth and privilege fell apart one day in 1984 when he unwisely attempted to smuggle cocaine through Heathrow. He was arrested and sentenced to four months' imprisonment, which he served in Pentonville, one of Britain's most notorious jails. 'Nothing to Declare' is based on the diary which he kept there; he was obliged to write it between the lines of books and letters that he had recieved, as keeping a diary was against prison rules. He has fleshed out the diary entries with autobiographical incidents, which inasmuch as they record the somewhat mindless doings of himself and his friends are of little interest. However, his experiences as a war correspondent and Lothario, and also his musings on being the son of a rich, tyrannical, unloving but financially generous father, mean that this extra material is by no means all dross.

However, the point of the book is the diary itself, and that is remarkable for what I take (having no personal experience of these things) to be the honesty of the account. More than once he remarks on the misleading picture of prison conveyed by Hollywood, which invariably omits the truly squalid elements; for example, his description of being transferred to a cell that was covered in faeces, courtesy of the previous occupant - which he then had to clean up - is quite stomach-churning, and that is not the only occasion on which faeces play a starring role. He is only too well aware of the irony of his situation, and indeed never felt able to confess his guilt to his father.

Of course this all took place twenty years ago, and prison conditions have improved since then, but the book remains an entertaining and instructive view of prison life. It is, however, something of a curate's egg, as the doings of his rich friends are of little interest now.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
franhigg | Jul 6, 2006 |

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Opere
33
Utenti
132
Popolarità
#153,555
Voto
3.8
Recensioni
3
ISBN
37
Lingue
3

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