London Born: A Memoir of a Forgotten City

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title London Born: A Memoir of a Forgotten City
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Sidney Day
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:192
Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 129
ISBN/Barcode 9780007203901
ClassificationsDewey:942.1082092
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher HarperCollins Publishers
Imprint HarperPerennial
Publication Date 3 April 2006
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

An extraordinary memoir from a man in his nineties who remembers everyday life in a North London now long gone: the hardships and deprivations of a life of poverty but also the resourcefulness and fortitude of a community determined to survive between the wars. 'When I look back, I can picture the old gels chinwagging on their steps in the Bay like it was yesterday. Little did they think that young Sid, passing by with his arse out of his trousers, would one way publish his memoirs!' 'Ordinary' people do not write their stories, believing their lives to be unremarkable. Some, like Sid, cannot write at all. But, with the aid of his granddaughter Helen Day, Sid has produced an extraordinary memoir of a city and a way of life now lost forever. 'London Born' is a book that has appeared against all the odds - as Sid says, 'When me granddaughter Helen Day said she wanted to record the story of the first half of me life and turn it into a book I was astonished. I thought to meself, Well, I've done a lot of things, but I never dreamt I'd get into the book game. You see, I can't write more than me own name.' In 'London Born', Sid remembers the city that emerged from the First World War and recreates the daily life of the people living in the notorious street known as 'Tiger Bay'. He describes the drinking and merrymaking, the poverty and unemployment - and the 'villainry'. With relish he relates how youthful high spirits and a refusal to accept the hardship of the times sometimes put him and his friends on the wrong side of the law. He goes on to tell of the wartime mayhem endured by Londoners and his determination to survive. His story closes with demobilisation when he returns to his wife and young family - 'the only thing that ever counted'. This is a memoir from a warm and cheeky voice; from someone who remembers, as if it were yesterday, parading down Archway in his fifty-bob suit, or running rings around Ernie Costen, the local policeman.

Author Biography

Sidney Day was born in Highgate in 1912. The youngest son in a family of eight, Sid did odd jobs from the age of six to supplement the family income and was taught by his father how to fish, catch birds and gather wild foods from Hampstead Heath and Kenwood. He left school without being able to read or write and followed his dad and brothers into the building trade, working on many estates and public buildings in London. Determined to improve his lot, Sid worked hard but he also went 'on the fiddle' and this landed him a spell in Wormwood Scrubs. After marrying Mary he combined building and removals with running a greengrocer's in East Finchley. In 1970 Sid and Mary moved to Yeovil in Somerset where they ran a small newsagent's shop. After Mary died in 1990, Sid became a fixture at local car boot sales where he enjoyed searching for bargains and making a bob or two. In 2001 Sid moved to live with his daughter Shirley in Dorset, where he lives today. His memoir, London Born, was compiled and edited by his granddaughter, Helen Day.

Reviews

'"London Born" is such a different sort of book from what's normally published that I can't resist helping it on its way ! It's a raw slice of London life served straight -- genuine, fascinating stuff for anyone who's wondered what life was really like for London's working classes.' Tracey Chevalier 'What a life! A memoir of London in the oral tradition. Sydney Day, a true vagabond, living on his wits, dodging rozzers, turning any trick and becoming a conscientious objector during the war years in order to stay at home to look after his family. Reading "London Born" was like meeting Sydney Day in person and getting a true, first hand account of London without the history lessons.' Hugo Hamilton, author of 'The Speckled People' 'The local connections of this one made it doubly enjoyable -- I live bang in Cabby's area, walk every day down his streets, and on the heath ! it is terrific material for any social historian to treasure, as well as a hugely enjoyable experience for the general reader ! it deserves a wide readership.' Margaret Forster