
Love, Nina Love, Nina auf DVD und Blu-ray
Die jährige Nina versucht in der Berufswelt der 80er Jahre Fuß zu fassen. Sie zieht vom britischen Leicester nach London, um als Nanny für eine betuchte Redakteurin zu arbeiten, und lernt den in der Nachbarschaft tätigen Pfleger Nunney kennen. Love, Nina: Die jährigen Nina (Faye Marsay) erzählt von ihren Erlebnissen in den er Jahren. Sie ist von Leicester nach London gezogen. Dort will sie . "Love, Nina" ist Nick Hornbys Adaption des Bestseller-Romans von Nina Stibbe. Nina zieht aus Leicester nach London und muss sich auf eine andere. Die Mini-Serie „Love, Nina“ entführt in einen britischen Intellektuellenhaushalt. In der BBC-Serie "Love, Nina" blickt das Kindermädchen humorvoll auf den skurrilen Alltag ihrer Dienstherren. Die fünfteilige BBC-Serie basiert auf echten Briefen, die die jährige Nina Stibbe in den er Jahren während ihrer Arbeit als Nanny bei einer Londoner. Nina Stibbe beginnt ihre Arbeit als Nanny bei einer berufstätigen alleinerziehenden Mutter in London. Die beiden Kinder Max und Joe.

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CHRISTIANS CAN YOU DO THIS CHALLENGE?Otherwise I would have heaved it across the room. View all 11 comments. Nov 05, Rebecca rated it really liked it Shelves: anglophiles-delight , epistolary , laugh-out-loud , memoirs , read-via-netgalley.
The household was sophisticated and worldly; mum MK allowed cursing and calling parents by their first names. The northwest London literary scene seems a slightly odd place for a midlands nanny, but she took on her role with aplomb.
Stibbe is terrific at reporting dialogue, and has a special gift for the witty aside. A nut broke my tooth a walnut, not a person.
He suffered from familial dysautonomia FD, or Riley-Day syndrome, which affects Ashkenazi Jews and was not expected to live past age five.
Yet now he is a thriving filmmaker, climber and all-round inspiring person. View all 5 comments.
I perhaps mistakenly watched 'Love, Nina' the series before reading this book and that was really quite funny. But I can honestly say that it wasn't particularly hilarious, witty, clever or any of the words bandied about by reviewers.
Nina moves to be a nanny to a family in London in the s. She has no experience in doing the job, but the boy's mother Mary-Kay doesn't mind - she doesn't have much time for her children anyway.
Nina's life now consists of organising two unruly but quick-wit I perhaps mistakenly watched 'Love, Nina' the series before reading this book and that was really quite funny.
Nina's life now consists of organising two unruly but quick-witted boys, dealing with new receipes her sister has sent her to cook, and being subjected to visits by Alan Bennett who lives down the road.
It's too regimented in format to be extremely funny. I finished it, but it wasn't a shame to me when it was over.
Apr 15, BrokenTune rated it it was ok Shelves: reviewed. I picked up this book because I watched the series based on it on Netflix the other week and really liked it - probably because of the cast Helena Bonham Carter played Mary-Kay Wilmers.
The book, however, was a different story. For some reason the story works on tv, but in epistolary novel format reads like a mildly amusing but gratingly inconsequential run down of stories that try to re-imagine Willy Russell's Educating Rita but set in London with added name-dropping of the London literati.
I'll give Stibbe's other books a miss. View all 4 comments. Recommended to Brown Girl Reading by: It was a book club pick. Love, Nina was my book club's pick for this month.
This book wasn't for me and somehow I knew that before I started. It's about a young girl who is a nanny for a mile in London in It's told in epistolary format but one of the things I hated was that Nina was writing to her sister Victoria but there were never any responses from her.
That was weird. Another thing that annoyed me was the story begins with 2,5 pages of he characters names and the abbreviations that she's going to be using thr Love, Nina was my book club's pick for this month.
Another thing that annoyed me was the story begins with 2,5 pages of he characters names and the abbreviations that she's going to be using throughout the letters.
Now I was reading this on my iPad so you can see how this was a bit of a pain. I just read it straight through without referring back to the list.
Now this book is supposed to be funny and fresh, but I didn't laugh once the entire time I was reading it.
At first I thought it was because I'm American but no one at the book club though it was funny either and most of them are British.
We all thought this was perfect waste of reading time. Another thing you should be ready for is the British slang, which I'm not completely familiar with, some things yes but there were some words in the book that through me and my dictionary.
So no I didn't like this one at all. Nina was immature and I just didn't care about her or what she had to say.
View 1 comment. Jan 20, Jennifer rated it really liked it Shelves: I was surprised by how much I truly enjoyed this book.
And how fantastic is it that she moves in with Mary Kay Wilmers, the editor of the London Review of Books and exwife of director Stephen Frears , who just happens to live across the street from Alan Bennett and next door to Claire Tomalin author of the giant Dicken biography I've been meaning to read and wife of Michael Frayn.
Now all this name dro I was surprised by how much I truly enjoyed this book. Now all this name dropping would be irrelevant if these people were not intelligent, witty, and prone to interesting kitchen banter.
Even the kids have a terrific dry sense of humor that they obviously learned from their mother. Lucky Nina and lucky us.
I especially fell in love with Mary Kay with her ability to sound completely unfazed at all times. Nina is very far from the perfect nanny but she seems to be the perfect fit for this slightly unconventional family.
I'm always a fan of the epistolary format and long for the days when my friends and I would write letters chronicling the daily details of our ordinary lives.
I'm so glad that Nina's sister saved all these letters. There is not a lot of action in this book.
Halfway through the book Nina becomes a full time student while staying very close to the family so the focus on the letters shifts over time but I was very sad when it ended and I realized that I was not going to get another update on the Gloucester Crescent crew.
View all 3 comments. Feb 21, Jarvo rated it it was amazing. I'm a former colleague of the author and approached the book with some trepidation: on the one hand I really wanted it to be good I remember Nina as a warm and likeable person, although she'd taken to wearing shoes by the time I might her , but on the other hand descriptions of the book made me worry that it was basically glorified gossip about a bunch of rarified North London creative types about whom I've more or less nothing in common.
Fears were completely unfounded. She may play up her ecc I'm a former colleague of the author and approached the book with some trepidation: on the one hand I really wanted it to be good I remember Nina as a warm and likeable person, although she'd taken to wearing shoes by the time I might her , but on the other hand descriptions of the book made me worry that it was basically glorified gossip about a bunch of rarified North London creative types about whom I've more or less nothing in common.
She may play up her eccentric ingenue persona but as she wryly observes as a result of her studies at Thames Poly 'you can't have fiction without autobiography, and you can't have autobiography without fiction'.
I found myself constantly interrupting my wife's reading in order to read out a line or two fom Nina's letters to her sister.
Dialogue with and between the two biys she is looking after, and culinary discussions with Alan Bennett a particular highlight. I think I've given it an extra star as I can hear Nina's voice throughout, a badge of authenticity.
I picked it up from the college library because it looked short and sweet and i thought it to be something different it definitely was. I am sill shocked that little Sam and Will had such a dirty mouth at their age.
A book that is just a series of letters from one person to another is amazing, I would love to read more books like it. MK was definitely my favourite character.
One million and twenty-seven years ago, after watching "Dirty Dancing" with married friends I loved and whose taste I would have sworn was exactly the same as mine in every respect, from strawberry soup a new passion of ours--we were only 21 to Wallace Stevens, Married Friend 1 said, "Anyone who criticizes that movie is a pedant.
I said nothing, and I swore that I would never draw a protective circle around anything I loved in that particular One million and twenty-seven years ago, after watching "Dirty Dancing" with married friends I loved and whose taste I would have sworn was exactly the same as mine in every respect, from strawberry soup a new passion of ours--we were only 21 to Wallace Stevens, Married Friend 1 said, "Anyone who criticizes that movie is a pedant.
I said nothing, and I swore that I would never draw a protective circle around anything I loved in that particular way, would never say, This is perfect, and you're a joyless prig if you disagree.
I confess that when I first read the comments here by people who did NOT give five stars and lavish praise to Love, Nina , I was tempted to break my vow.
To me, the book is a rare and delightful gift because a it's an epistolary memoir that reads like an epistolary novel, and b it's funny without being mean, and c it's sweet and yet it manages to seem true.
As a person who has read many, many young adult novels, and who has spent years trying to write them in an authentically innocent yet witty voice, I find it astonishing that Nina Stibbe managed to forge that kind of voice in a series of impromptu letters while actually being quite young.
I'm not going to sword fight with the people who gave this book two stars, but I'm going to urge it on you and say I hope this book will be your "Dirty Dancing.
To me, at least, it's perfect. Nov 13, Sam Woodfield rated it liked it. In a strange way I really liked this book - it made me giggle and was a really easy read.
I was, however, left with a question at the end - what was the point? The book is a series of letters written by the author to her sister during the time she had moved to London to work as a nanny in Primrose Hill.
She spends her time looking after tow young boys, Sam and Will, whilst studying for an English Literature degree and learning to cook.
The letters in this book are really nice, short and witty and In a strange way I really liked this book - it made me giggle and was a really easy read.
The letters in this book are really nice, short and witty and give a great insight into the lives of those in the house.
There's Mary-Kay the mother - a witty fashionable woman with a very dry sense of humour. Alan Bennett, the author, lives across the road pops in for dinner, and the boys, Sam and Will, are very independent young men who have a very funny way of learning about the world.
Nina herself is also very funny and a little bit clumsy, and all of the people mentioned in these letters are really endearing and funny, especially when they interact together.
Nina does a very funny thing in her letters where she recounts conversations had in the household, and these were the funniest part of this book, many of them causing me to laugh out loud.
Despite all of this, my earlier question still remains which is what was the point in publishing these letters. Yes, they were funny, but I did get to the end of the novel and feel that nothing much had happened and although I enjoyed it, it was a bit of a non-event.
For those in the book, I can imagine this was a fabulous read which bought back some wonderful memories and really made them laugh.
Although for a reader from the outside this is a nice read, I don't think it has that familiarity which might be needed to make this really great.
Overall though, this was a great book to read and enjoy - it was quick and easy and had some really funny moments.
I would recommend others read it but not expect to come away with any earth shattering opinions. Dec 30, Diane Barnes rated it it was ok Shelves: don-t-want-to-finish.
I read 60 pages,, and then decided I just didn't care anymore. There were some humorous conversational exchanges, some sort of interesting literary gossip, but it all got old after awhile.
View 2 comments. Feb 09, Paul rated it liked it Shelves: books-read This is a collection of letters from Nina back to her sister Vic written in the 's when she was a nanny in London.
In the same street was Claire Tomalin and Alan Bennett , so Nina was surrounded by literary influences. The letters are a raw and lightly edited collection of her thoughts, feelings and experiences that happened when she was nanny, from the absurd, Alan Ben This is a collection of letters from Nina back to her sister Vic written in the 's when she was a nanny in London.
The letters are a raw and lightly edited collection of her thoughts, feelings and experiences that happened when she was nanny, from the absurd, Alan Bennet assisting with fixing household object to the surreal conversations that she has with the broad minded Mary-Kay Wilmers MK in the book.
As she settles in the area she begins to find her feet, and the letters detail the silly mistakes and life lessons that she learns and tells her sister about.
Half way through her stay she stars a degree at Thames Polytechnic and stops being a nanny. The letters still continue as she settles in to a different routine.
In the letters home she describes her triumphs and her anxieties and the new friends that she has made. After a while she moves back in with the family and commutes to polytechnic.
Really a 2. This both charmed and irritated in equal measure. I am not a huge fan of the epistolary style, i think that it can be used to enhance a book, but when it is the entire text then it gets a bit much.
There were some very funny bits in the book, but I didn't like the conversations that were included in the letters.
Whilst they filled in the gaps in the story, they grated after a while. That said, this book is worth reading; for a series of letters Stibble shows her raw potential as a writer with acute observations and wry humour, and a honesty and innocence that is fresh and startling.
May 06, Ann rated it really liked it. Who would have thought letters between two sisters would be so entertaining and enjoyable. These letters were written in the 's and in today's world would not exist because they would be replaced by phone calls.
We follow Nina in her job as a nanny with her charges, Will and Sam in London, and her sister, Vic, a nurse still at home in Lichestershire. A good read.
I was alone so maybe it doesn't count? I received this as an advance reader's copy from goodreads giveaways.
Although slightly amusing, I was basically bored by this book. I felt obligated to read the whole thing in order to review it and live up to my end of the deal for the giveaways.
I was interested in learning about the daily life in a London household from the Nanny's point of view. In the end, I found myself hoping that this was a very atypical household.
I was not at all amused by the foul language used by the 9 and 10 year o I received this as an advance reader's copy from goodreads giveaways.
I was not at all amused by the foul language used by the 9 and 10 year old boys in the family which was seemingly encouraged by the adults around them.
I did find humor in some of the conversations which gave insight into the relationship between the nanny and the boys.
This one was my favorite: Sam: How do you play marbles? Me: I don't actually know. Sam: Is it to do with rolling them? Me: I think so, but I'm not sure how exactly.
Sam: Didn't you play marbles in your day? Will: She lost them at a young age. Dec 05, Amy rated it it was amazing. I have only just discovered Nina Stibbe and I am tearing through all her books as fast as I can there are only five of them, damnit, what am I going to do --anyway, this is the first, and it's fantastic.
If you don't think you'd like to read a collection of letters from a young London nanny to her sister--well, read it anyway. It's sharp, funny, brilliant, British, and did I mention that she's the nanny of the editor of the London Review of Books and Alan Bennett lives across the street?
Read i I have only just discovered Nina Stibbe and I am tearing through all her books as fast as I can there are only five of them, damnit, what am I going to do --anyway, this is the first, and it's fantastic.
Read it read it read it! I'm on to the next one, except that I loved this one so much that I can't bear to start another book yet, even another Nina Stibbe book.
Dec 02, Penny rated it really liked it Shelves: memoir. I've not read a book like this before - all it consists of is a series of letters from Nina to her sister Vic, written in the 80's.
Nina is living as a nanny later a student in a very literary household in London. The letters to her sister are just day to day accounts of her life and many times they reminded me strongly of Mass Observation reports, especially when they include dialogue.
Nina would have made a superb Mass Observer. I didn't laugh out loud but I did find the whole book light, fro I've not read a book like this before - all it consists of is a series of letters from Nina to her sister Vic, written in the 80's.
I didn't laugh out loud but I did find the whole book light, frothy, easy to read and often very amusing. Alan Bennett was forever there for supper, and I loved his droll comments.
Claire Tomalin lived a couple of doors away - she was already very high in my estimation but she soared ever higher when I read that she actually pipes cooking instructions on her pies in potato when she's made them in advance for dinner 30 mins at 4 gas.
Aug 06, Melissa rated it did not like it. I came to this after watching the series on BBC 1. The series was funny and charming. The book? Not so much.
I expected the book to be like the show but sadly its like reading the Cliff Notes version of someone's life.
The kids are the best part and they are only mentioned in small bits. The letters themselves make the author seem very self-absorbed and small minded.
She is writing to her sister and her sister writes back but her letters are not included. Most of the time, she only mentions what I came to this after watching the series on BBC 1.
Most of the time, she only mentions what her sister wrote in a post-script unless its a recipe. Sadly, this book is just boring and completely uninteresting.
I always feel bad when I don't like autobiographical books. I feel like I'm judging the author's life. In this case, it is definitely the writing style.
So much promise and so little reward. Apr 20, Jacki Julia Flyte rated it really liked it. This is a collection of letters that Nina Stibbe wrote to her sister Victoria between and while working and later studying in London.
She is a entertaining writer with a great eye for detail and a knack for relaying conversations word for word. It's not a laugh out loud kind of book but it is enjoyable humorous.
Nina was a live in nanny employed by Mary-Kay Wilmers who is now editor of the London Review of Books to look after her two sons.
They lived in Gloucester Crescent in London, This is a collection of letters that Nina Stibbe wrote to her sister Victoria between and while working and later studying in London.
They lived in Gloucester Crescent in London, which was home to a host of literary types including Alan Bennett - who lived across the road and came to dinner every night.
Mary-Kay's house was described by the Guardian as "a sort of upmarket commune" and Nina later lived with the family while studying a degree in English Literature.
I felt like I was there, hanging out with all these intelligent and funny people who liked to read Yeats and Chaucer and TS Eliot and banter about words and ideas over dinner.
They throw casual insults at one another constantly, but no one ever takes offence. Her two young charges prove difficult for Nina to keep track of, leading to an awkward conversation and an even more awkward date down at the local pub.
Nina befriends her fellow nanny Amanda, but the pair suffer an embarrassing incident when they attend a yoga class - an incident made worse when Amanda shares news of the incident with the family.
Travel back in time to check out the early roles of some of Hollywood's heavy hitters. Plus, see what some of your favorite '90s stars look like now.
See the full gallery. A glimpse of 80s literary London based on Nina Stibbe's letters to her sister. Just watched the second episode of Love Nina and enjoyed it just as I did the first.
Yes you do have to free yourself from some of the awkward things and then it becomes a wonderful amusing charming piece of work.
I think that as it is from a book by Nina Stibbe that it is taken from her real life experiences. I read the first review and was shocked that anyone could not like this refreshing programme.
I come from London and find the depiction of the comfortably well off London family with ghastly children and odd bods of notoriety as lodgers pretty accurate.
I have groaned almost wept at the poor comedy that BBC1 has served up over the past year, wonderful comedy actors but with terrible scripts.
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Does Ben Hur 1959 Stream Deutsch refer to her brother Jez or someone else who is not mentioned in the character list? Error rating book. In this case, it is definitely the writing style. I'm on to the next one, except that I loved this one so Nina that I can't bear to start another book yet, even another Nina Stibbe book. Company Credits. View 1 comment. Miniserie in 5 Riesenwelle 1 Staffel. Ethan Rouse. Rebecca Alf Stimme. Kommentar speichern. Nina Stibbe. Details Besetzung Wiederholungen Ähnliche Sendungen. Er hat einen Job als Pfleger für hilfsbedürftige Menschen. Add Cris Tall first question. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Books by Nina Stibbe. I expected this to be one of my favorite reads of the summer, that's how excited I was about it. Blah blah blah -- Instagram Profilbild Ansehen your summary. Looking for something to watch? Detailsuche Sendungstitel. Darin erzählt sie von ihren Erlebnissen mit den diskussionsfreudigen Kindern und den Begegnungen mit einem Pfleger, in den sie sich verliebt Tatort Klassentreffen. Alle Nina. Broadchurch Staffel 1 5 Episoden Zum Anbieter. Ihre Erlebnisse hält sie in Briefen fest. Das könnte dich auch interessieren. Als Nanny will sie in London erste Erfahrungen darin sammeln, was es bedeutet, selbstständig zu sein und Verantwortung zu übernehmen.Love, Nina Statistiken
Joshua McGuire. Helena Bonham Carter. Schaue jetzt Love, Nina. Und schon ist Richter Beatrice mitten drin im unterhaltsamen Kultur-Clash im London der 80er! Menü Tagestipps Ich kann die Einwilligung jederzeit per E-Mail an kontakt imfernsehen. Cast und Crew von "Love, Nina". Crew. Regisseur: S. J. Clarkson. Darsteller. Malcolm Tanner: Jason Watkins; Nunney: Joshua McGuire; Joe: Ethan Rouse. Love, Nina ist eine britische Comedy-Serie aus dem Hause BBC, die im Jahr zum ersten Mal ausgestrahlt wurde. Die Geschichte dreht sich um die titelge. Berlinale 2O16 Alain Delon Beeblebrox. Clarkson engagiert Sieben neue Darsteller für Prequel Deine Bewertung. Ansonsten könnte Nina dort zufrieden und glücklich sein. Mit der Speicherung meiner personenbezogenen Daten bin ich einverstanden. Und Jamie, ein weiterer Bekannter der Familie hat angeblich Filzläuse. Kommentar speichern.Love, Nina On iPlayer Video
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