Bruce Nash
Author of Baseball Hall of Shame
About the Author
Image credit: Bruce Nash
Series
Works by Bruce Nash
Sports Hall of Shame: Young Fans' Edition: Sports Hall of Shame: Young Fans' Edition (1990) 13 copies
Baseball Hall of Shame: Young Fan's Edition 2: Baseball Hall of Shame: Young Fan's Edition 2 (1991) 8 copies
The Hollywood Walk of Shame: The Most Outrageously Funny Moments in Show Business History (1993) 8 copies
Sports Hall of Shame Golf Cartoon Classics: The Most Outrageous Moments in Golf History (1993) 5 copies
Football Hall of Shame 2: Young Fans' Edition: Football Hall of Shame 2: Young Fans' Edition (1990) 4 copies
Engineering Disasters: New Orleans (Modern Marvels) [2006 TV documentary] (2006) — Creator & Producer — 4 copies
Basketball Hall of Shame: Young Fans' Edition: Basketball Hall of Shame: Young Fans' Edition (1993) 3 copies
Golf Hall of Shame-12 Copy Prepak 3 copies
The Book of Tests: The Ultimate Collection of Quizzes to Help You Find Out What You're Really Like (1980) 2 copies
Bricks (Modern Marvels) [TV documentary] — Producer — 2 copies
Soap Dish 1 copy
American Steel: Built to Last (Modern Marvels) [1998 TV documentary] (2002) — Creator & Producer — 1 copy
Sugar (Modern Marvels) 1 copy
Dynamite (Modern Marvels) [TV documentary] — Director — 1 copy
Modern Marvels: cannons — Director — 1 copy
Machu Picchu (Modern Marvels) — Director — 1 copy
Truck Stops (Modern Marvels) 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Nash, Bruce Mitchell
- Birthdate
- 1947-08-14
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Brooklyn, New York, USA
- Organizations
- A&E Network
Members
Reviews
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 101
- Members
- 1,111
- Popularity
- #23,121
- Rating
- 3.3
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 136
- Languages
- 2
- Favorited
- 1
When Rose learns her Scrabble partner has fallen to her death, she is sure that it is no accident but can’t quite recall why. It has something to do with the golden Scare Manager and the Angry Nurse, and perhaps her son’s dirty bottom and the password he needs. To make sense of what is wrong, Rose must sort through the present and the past, the understood and the unknown, the remembered and forgotten.
With a clever use of language, Nash draws the reader into Rose’s world as she roams the halls of the aged care facility. The narrative is surprisingly playful, humour deftly tempers the sharp-edged pangs of loss and frustration. Muddled words and puns add a layer of lightness, even absurdity at times. Moments of lucidity fade into the labyrinth of forgetting, so that parts of the narrative feel circular, but Rose slowly makes progress. We get glimpses of the truth that Rose is searching for, but as an unreliable narrator, it’s often as murky for us as it is for her.
I admire what Nash has accomplished with this unique novel. All the Words We Know, is clever, poignant, and entertaining.… (more)