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One for My Baby
- Narrated by: Gerard Doyle
- Length: 10 hrs and 53 mins
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Summary
After Alfie Budd’s beloved wife dies, he returns to England to find his parents feuding and his grandmother’s health failing. Alfie’s ambitions to be a writer are fading as well. But when he begins tutoring a young single mother for her A level exams, his bewildering life is suddenly transformed. A widely published journalist and the best-selling author of Man and Boy, Tony Parsons also regularly appears on BBC television.
What listeners say about One for My Baby
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- Julia Mann
- 19-10-24
Warm funny and heartwarming
Wonderful warm story about love, death and living. Consumed in a couple of sittings. Love this author.
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- Anonymous User
- 11-10-24
What an amazing heartfelt story
I wasn’t sure when I started listening that this story was my cup of tea but I’ve laughed, giggled, been a little surprised and shed a tear. So warm and truthful with open emotion. Definitely my cup of tea !
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- PMB
- 06-10-24
What a heartening story. Life, love and loss.
The book was touched with deep family values in an ever changing society. Love the relationship Alfie had with his much loved Nan. Highlighted the need for mutual understanding and respect for others.
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- Gaynor
- 22-10-24
Alfie idolizes a dead women so can be terrible to the living.
In One More for My Baby, Tony Parsons crafts a story centered on Alfie, a deeply flawed protagonist who is consumed by the memory of his deceased wife. Alfie idolizes her to the point of viewing every other woman as inferior, a dangerous mindset that colors his relationships with the people around him. This obsession becomes the justification for his mistreatment of a series of students at the college where he teaches, highlighting his abuse of power. Alfie’s inability to see past his idealized version of his late wife traps him in a cycle of toxic behavior.
The plot thickens when Alfie meets a cleaner at the college, a woman he immediately begins to “advise” on how she should live her life. His unsolicited guidance comes across as condescending, revealing a man who projects his personal frustrations onto others. Alfie’s hypocrisy is further amplified by his constant criticism of his father, whom he chastises for similar behaviors—offering life advice without practicing what he preaches. This contradiction lays bare Alfie's inability to see the parallels between his actions and the very behavior he condemns in his father.
Parsons' writing presents a complex character study that touches on themes of grief, power dynamics, and self-deception. Alfie's character is frustrating, yet deeply human, as he grapples with his unresolved emotions and misguided attempts to regain control of his life. However, the novel can be difficult to connect with, given Alfie's treatment of women and his lack of accountability.
Ultimately, One More for My Baby is a thought-provoking read that explores how unchecked grief and obsession can distort one’s view of others and oneself. While Alfie’s character is far from likable, his internal struggles offer a compelling, if uncomfortable, lens into the ways people justify their worst impulses.
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