
Let Me Finish: A Moving and Funny Memoir in Essays―A New Yorker Life in Baseball and Family
by Roger Angell
About this book
Widely known as an original and graceful writer, Roger Angell has developed a devoted following through his essays in the New Yorker. Now, in Let Me Finish, a deeply personal, fresh form of autobiography, he takes an unsentimental look at his early days as a boy growing up in Prohibition-era New York with a remarkable father; a mother, Katharine White, who was a founding editor of the New Yorker; and a famous stepfather, the writer E. B. White.Intimate, funny, and moving portraits form the book’s centerpiece as Angell remembers his surprising relatives, his early attraction to baseball in the time of Ruth and Gehrig and DiMaggio, and his vivid colleagues during a long career as a New Yorker writer and editor. Infused with pleasure and sadness, Angell’s disarming memoir also evokes an attachment to life’s better moments.
Where to buy
No purchase options available at this time.
More by Roger Angell

Best American Magazine Writing 2013
Ta-Nehisi Coates, Stephen King, Dahlia Lithwick, Frank Rich, Sid Holt, Roger Angell, Robert F. Worth, Michael Wolff, Mimi Swartz, Dexter Filkins, Charles Graeber, Brian Mockenhaupt, Daphne Martin

Five Seasons: A Baseball Companion
Roger Angell

Game Time: A Baseball Companion – Roger Angell's Forty Years of Joyful Observations
Roger Angell

Late Innings
Roger Angell