Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
Memories come flooding back!, July 24, 2006
This is an excellent read, as is Paul Burke's earlier book Father Frank. I suppose I would enjoy it even more than the average person having had a very similar upbringing to Dave Kelly in the same part of London. Only real difference was that the boys in the book are around 8 or 9 years older than me. There is so much of everything mentioned that I can relate to, epecially the 'fictional' St Bede's School the two attended. Rest assured that St Bede's is anything but fictional. The name and location of the school and names of teachers have been changed, but the school and characters portrayed are very real. I know because I attended the school concerned and spent two terrified years in room 26 - 'doc's' maths class... Despite my own familiarity with much of what the boys go through, it is Burke's storytelling abilities that make his books such an enjoyable read. His ability to put the experiences of growing up into words set him apart. I sure wish I had his ability. I'm very much looking forward to Paul Burke's next book, whenever that may be. In the meantime, if you have not yet read Father Frank and Untorn Tickets, then I suggest strongly that you do.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
A great read, highly enjoyable, February 12, 2006
I tracked this book down after reading Father Frank, Paul Burkes first book which was a gem. This is even better. Two teenagers who become friends by working in the same cinema (even though they have gone to the same school for five years previously), soon become adept at lining their pockets with a few perks of the job. Both are from strict Catholic families, although with a difference -one is Irish Catholic and the other Polish Catholic. Their Catholicism shapes their childhood lives but they are both on the brink of adulthood -both very keen to break away and form their own lives and opinions. This book is beautifully written, the author really sets everything up well, with great detail regarding the boys, their backgrounds, their tyrannical teachers at school, where they live and the girls they fall in love with. I found this to be a really good book and am on the hunt for more by Paul Burke.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Coming-of-Age Antics in 70s England, November 12, 2004
A nice little book about two friends from a dodgy part of London who bond at their grammar school, go on to work in a cinema where they soon start conning the corporate owners out of cash to fuel their extracurricular activities. This book won't change the world, but has some nice observational humour about relationships, 6th form college and the 70s music scene. A nice light read for Anglophiles in their mid thirties.
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