The Boy from Rod Alley

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Pub Date 3 May 2019 | Archive Date 24 Jun 2019

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Description

The Boy from Rod Alley is an account of a 1930s childhood. This depiction of one boy’s experience blends into a story of a decade, in the aftermath of the Great War, as ex-soldiers ride their old army bikes, ‘widow-women’ are familiar figures and ‘Umbrella Joe’ paces in shell-shock aimlessness.

John guides readers past the deep pond in front of the house, both feared and loved, with surrounding willows simultaneously familiar and a challenge. The great village Green, with a mixture of humble or imposing dwellings, and school, church, chapels, shops, a smithy, and his family agricultural-engineering workshop and foundry around its edge, holds delights or threats. At each of its five corners, a road leads to other places which also become part of the story, a warren, lake, small stream, villages, small towns, the city of Norwich, the latter increasingly alluring as he grows. And from other places come strangers or familiar visitors. Among them, as among the ‘locals’, some are memorable.

Discarding adult hindsight in favour of the immediacy of the narrative, John recounts feelings and notions inherent in his boyhood experiences and actions. In his head are characters from books, newspapers, songs, films, history and legend. His imagination relates these day-to-day, realities, shaping his attitudes and interests.

The Boy from Rod Alley is an account of a 1930s childhood. This depiction of one boy’s experience blends into a story of a decade, in the aftermath of the Great War, as ex-soldiers ride their old...


A Note From the Publisher

John Loveday, a former teacher, was born in 1926. His novel Halo (Fourth Estate) won the McKitterick and the David Higham prizes, and was published internationally, as was Goodbye, Buffalo Sky (Bloomsbury), which won Best Children’s Book Award. Adding to his published poetry, and painting in oils, are remaining interests.

John Loveday, a former teacher, was born in 1926. His novel Halo (Fourth Estate) won the McKitterick and the David Higham prizes, and was published internationally, as was Goodbye, Buffalo Sky...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781789019445
PRICE £4.99 (GBP)
PAGES 200

Average rating from 4 members


Featured Reviews

I usually really enjoy books which explore the past through the eyes of someone who lived it, and I thought this would be a good one, as the author was remembering his childhood experiences in Norfolk just before the Second World War.

Some of the stories he tells are incredibly strong, some are funny, and some are absolutely heartbreaking (poor Ferdy, living a nomad life with his grandparents, will haunt me).

However, I had a problem with the way the book was written - it is just a ragbag of memories as they came to him in a stream of consciousness. There was no attempt to impose any order, any chronology or even to put them into themes. The result is very jumbled, with the reader bouncing around from one event to another, only to resume that theme some pages later. Paragraphs have no relevance to those going before or after. It is like he dictated his memories to someone and they wrote them down. I find this a very lazy way of presenting a story; the reader deserves some coherence which could easily have been provided and it is not enough to say the author is presenting it as if he were a child remembering, without any adult intervention.

It is worth reading, but be prepared for a jolty ride!

Thank you to NetGalley and Troubador Publishing Ltd for allowing me access to the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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The author wrote a memoir that perfectly captured the triumphs and setbacks of her life. It was easy to empathize with the author due to the raw writing.

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Really enjoyed this memoir of the authors life in England in a small village.A memoir of the people he knew the news the activities.Really enjoyed hgoing back in time to his world.#netgalley#troubador

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