Fascinating and deeply moving

Daily Mail

Superlative . . . He is blessed as an autobiographer with an outstandingly strange and only fitfully happy childhood. Furthermore, while we would expect him to have a firm grasp of twentieth-century history and politics, at once authoritative and subversive, what is more surprising is his tangy, sensuous prose

The Sunday Times

Simpson is that uncommon beast: a man with something to say who says it with passion, humour and great style . . . another triumph

The New Statesman

Se alle

Readable, compassionate . . . His portrait of his father is on a par with other superb literary portraits of fathers . . . <i>Days from a Different World</i> is about an era, about generations of a family being irrevocably shaped by two world wars. How fitting that one of our best, most unjaded war correspondents should show, in this marvellous memoir, how changed – even ruined – lives can be by war

Literary Review

Delicate and haunting

The Glasgow Herald

A thoughtful, lyrical memoir shot through with searing honesty

Irish Examiner

Vividly atmospheric, full of pithy anecdotes, and intensely affecting, Simpson's memoir is a triumph

Daily Express

A superb writer . . . It's a long time since I've enjoyed a personal memoir so much

- George Rosie, <i>The Glasgow Sunday Herald</i>,

He gives us an unforgettable gallery of characters . . . and he skilfully evokes the atmosphere of post-war London

- Betty Tadman, <i>The Scotsman</i>,

Recollected in tranquillity, Simpson's memories and thoughts are unsentimental and perceptive

- Rachel Redford, <i>The Observer</i>,

‘I have already touched on my childhood in Strange Places, Questionable People. But the further through life I get the more I want to revisit it. I want to look at the whole of my childhood, the England I grew up in and my family.’

A candid and beautifully written memoir that takes readers on a journey through post-war England.

In Days from a Different World, legendary foreign correspondent John Simpson transports us to the late 1940s to revisit his childhood and tell the somewhat strange and often deeply painful story of his family.

Simpson introduces us to his father and his grandmother, still living in the small and rather depressing south London suburb which his family built, dominated and, ultimately, declined with. We meet the grandfather who drank the family money away and abandoned his wife and children, and the grandfather who toured the country with a Wild West show. We learn, too, of the broken marriages and the unfulfilled lives, of the people who died, and the lives which were just beginning.

Vivid, nostalgic and touching, Days from a Different World will enchant all those who read it with its honest and evocative portrayal of a bygone era.

'Superlative' – The Sunday Times

'Fascinating and deeply moving' – Daily Mail

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John Simpson's bestselling memoir of his childhood, through which he also paints a vivid picture of Britain in the 1940s.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780330435628
Publisert
2019-09-05
Utgiver
Pan Macmillan
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
203 mm
Bredde
127 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
416

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

John Simpson is the BBC's World Affairs Editor. He has twice been the Royal Television Society's Journalist of the Year and won countless other major television awards. He has written several books, including four volumes of autobiography, Strange Places, Questionable People, A Mad World, My Masters, News from No Man's Land and Not Quite World's End and a childhood memoir, Days from a Different World. He is also the author of The Wars Against Saddam, Twenty Tales from the War Zone and Unreliable Sources, as well as several novels. He lives in London with his South African wife, Dee, and their son, Rafe.