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Bad Blood: A Memoir
 
 

Bad Blood: A Memoir (Paperback)

by Lorna Sage (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  (26 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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621 used & new available from £0.01
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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate; New Ed edition (2 Jul 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1841150436
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841150437
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.9 x 2.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 35,777 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
    (Publishers and authors: Improve Your Sales)
  • Other Editions: Hardcover  |  Audio Cassette (Audiobook) |  All Editions


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
This is one of those memoirs of a difficult, sometimes violent girlhood, that makes riveting reading--not as harrowing as Andrea Ashworth's brilliant Once in a House on Fire, but every bit as good. Whether this is voyeuristic is debatable, but clearly the author, Lorna Sage, felt she had something to tell, and she tells it vividly. She grew up with an absent father, a quiet and docile mother, and--the two most powerful figures of her formative years--a pair of ferocious, tyrannical, impossible grandparents. Her grandfather is the most striking of all, not least because he was a Church of England clergyman. Sage offers an unforgettable evocation of this bitter, hard-drinking, womanising cleric, as he strides through the desolate churchyard with his little granddaughter clinging onto his black skirts in the wind. "He was good at funerals, being gaunt and lined, marked with mortality. He had a scar down his hollow cheek, too, which grandma had done with the carving knife one of the many times when he came home pissed and incapable." The place, too, is strongly evoked: a small, isolated, squalid village on the English-Welsh border in darkest Shropshire, the very landscape of that haunting writer of the 1920s, Mary Webb. Sometimes, though, Sage's girlhood--we're only talking 1940s and 1950s here--feels more like it is something out of the pages of the Brontës, and indeed she acknowledges this freely. "Perhaps I really did grow up, as I sometimes suspect, in a time warp, an enclave of the 19th century?" That weird sense of anachronism makes this a riveting if sometimes uncomfortable read.--Christopher Hart --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Daily Telegraph
'Bad Blood is pretty much in a class of its own . . . It is a measure of her achievement that she can turn the peculiarities of her own past - and they are peculiar - into a narrative that speaks for the whole of post-war Britian . . . This is not just an exquisite personal memoir, it is a vital piece of our collective past.'

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