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The Boy Who Loved Books by John Sutherland

When Sutherland's policeman father died at the start of t he Second World War during RAF training in South Africa, his mother soon left for Argentina with a moneybags lover. John was brought up by relatives in Scotland and Colchester — where he eventually got into the local grammar school and, after National Service, move on to the new University of Leicester. The main themes of his hilarious and horrifying memoir are books and booze. The Emeritus Lord Northcliffe Professor of University College London proves the former are not just a means of escapism: they are a way of telling the most painful truths.

Synopsis by Foyles.co.uk

A memoir in the tradition of Lorna Sage's BAD BLOOD and Blake Morrison's WHEN DID YOU LAST SEE YOUR FATHER?John Sutherland's childhood ended abruptlythe day his father was killed at the beginning of World War Two -- happily before he could kill any Germans. John's widowed mother fell in love with a new man and decamped to Argentina, leaving John to be looked after by various relatives-- some more suited to raising children than others. It was an odd,unsettled childhood and John took refuge in books. He quickly learned how to fit in without disturbing people, and, in doing so, began to store up resentments as a child. These resentments, with the trigger of alcohol in later life, would one day explode-- serially and for many years. The Boy Who Loved Books" is an account of a disrupted childhood, but it is also an account of one man's, often desperate, love affair with reading matter. Books in many ways changed his life, propelling him to university, and sustaining him in the dark times that were to come.It is also a record of the shifting twentieth century and the profound changes that shook society and its ways of dealing with children in the institutions of family, school and university.

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