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Intimate textures

by
June 2010, issue no. 322

Sunshine And Shadow: A Brothers' Story by James and Stephen Dack (with Larry Writer)

Pier 9, $34.95 pb, 305 pp

Intimate textures

by
June 2010, issue no. 322

Siblings tend to play little part in family memoirs that focus on parents. Most memoirists write as if they are only children. Perhaps this is unsurprising; siblings’ memories of childhood rarely correspond. As Robert Gray observes in his autobiography The Land I Came Through Last (2008), ‘the one in the family who is going to be a writer is always an only child’.

It is fascinating, therefore, when siblings collaborate on a memoir about their upbringing. Sunshine and Shadow: A Brothers’ Story is collaborative autobiography in both senses of the term: the telling of the story is shared between two brothers, James and Stephen Dack (with occasional input from their only sister, Alison), while the memoir is ghost-written by the journalist and biographer Larry Writer. The latter has done a fine job cobbling together countless hours of interviews with the Dack brothers into a mostly seamless and engaging narrative.

Stephen Mansfield reviews 'Sunshine And Shadow: A Brothers’ Story' by James and Stephen Dack (with Larry Writer)

Sunshine And Shadow: A Brothers' Story

by James and Stephen Dack (with Larry Writer)

Pier 9, $34.95 pb, 305 pp

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