Preview

Alan Johnson This Boy Analysis

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1377 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Alan Johnson This Boy Analysis
The British political book that most moved me this year is not a political book at all. Former home secretary, Alan Johnson's This Boy(Bantam) is an often harrowing memoir of his impoverished 1950s childhood at the northern fringe of Notting Hill, which, though not as grand as it is today, still represented two utterly different worlds divided by a few streets.
Alan's dad was a charming wastrel, Steve "Ginger" Johnson, a womanising pub pianist who blew his chance of a musical career and left the chores and cost of raising a family to Lily, his scouser wife. Too poor to accept her 11‑plus place, she worked herself to death in the Rachmanite-slum-landlord mean streets of W10, a place of outside loos and candles, of always being cold and hungry, of hiding from the rent man and getting false teeth because they're cheaper.
That Johnson survived all this to become a cabinet minister able to tell the tale with style and humour – but no glib political conclusions – is thanks to his formidable sister Linda. Just three years older than Alan, she was always the family's adult. When the offer of a council flat came two weeks after their mum's death, Linda had the gall to turn it down (too nasty and damp) while insisting to Mr Pepper, the social worker, that she be allowed to raise Alan. Linda
…show more content…
McBride is clever and hard-working (despite the booze); his book reads like a selective confession to a Catholic priest. He leaked to make Tony Blair look greedy and lazy, to stitch up Gordon's rivals and the Tories too when he had the time, cheerfully rifling the government's policy hamper to further his goals. I thought I knew a lot about this world. I was naive, but remain grateful for my ignorance. McBride debauched the system because he believed Brown would be a great PM. As usual, alas, the feral press emerges badly from his

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Home - Crichton Smith

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Mr Jackson is a character that I find very interesting in the short story “Home”. Written by Iain Crichton Smith “Home” is a story about a couple, who after emigrating to Africa, come to visit Glasgow, their old home. After a while they realise that Glasgow is not their home anymore, and find themselves in a five star hotel where they feel much more comfortable. I intend to explore how Crichton Smith uses setting, dialogue and characterisation to intensify the themes of isolation and greed, that make the character of Mr Jackson so interesting.…

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Would you give up everything that you knew you wanted just to have something better later on, Even if it costs you your friends? The book “The other boy” by Hailey Abbott is based off of a girl learning that when you have something good not to let it go. Everyone needs to think about what they have before you let it go. Celeste finds a new person that she starts to fall for. But not knowing what to do she gets caught up making a decision. Looking past what is there she thinks that she has everything in the world. She soon realizes that what she thought was perfect actually isn’t perfect at all. Her world gets flipped around…

    • 774 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “All were merged into one smoothly working machine; they were, in fact, a poem of motion, a symphony of swinging blades”, this quote stated by Daniel James Brown, author of The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. This inspiring biography is about the enthralling story behind US gold medal winner Joe Rantz. The book describes in detail the tremendous amount of work he and his fellow teammates at Washington University accomplished to take bring home the much coveted gold medal, at a time of great political strife throughout the world. In this enthralling book, Daniel Brown writes about the harsh life of Joe Rantz, where he faced abandonment by his family. The book is set during the Great Depression and during Hitler’s genocide of Non-Aryans. Through the use of pathos that is evidence of emotional…

    • 776 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The two women in the story are Mrs Johnston and Mrs Lyons. Mrs Johnston is a lower class single mother living in a council house in the centre of Liverpool. Her husband has left her, while she is pregnant, for a younger woman after she had given birth to 7 children. Willy Russell portrays her as a superstitious and lonely woman. ‘Oh God. Never put new shoes on a table Mrs Lyons.’ At the beginning of the play, I feel sorry for Mrs Johnston because she has lots of children and loves them all equally but she simply cannot support them financially as a cleaner. How she has let herself get into this position is extremely sad but is also a social comment by Willy Russell on society today. Russell sets Mrs Johnston up as the extreme example of the benefit living, single parent family who live with and by the hand of the social. ‘The welfare’s already been onto me. They say I’m incapable of controlling the kids I got.’ I do feel a bit angry at Mrs Johnston when she gave Eddie away to Mrs Lyons but when I see how Mrs Lyons manipulated her and made her think that she was doing the right thing, I feel sorry for her. The picture is quite complicated; Russell is testing the moral ethics of the audience.…

    • 789 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deabarcle

    • 294 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Anthony Hill is currently a multi-award-winning, bestselling author and his books are based around both kids and adults which results in them being popular. Soldier Boy, being Anthony’s first award-winning book as well as Captain Cook’s Apprentice, was based around the life of the youngest ANZAC soldier, Jim Martin, fighting in World War 1. Anthony Hill pieced together a moving portrait of Jim’s short and tragic life based on the recollections of his family and letters he wrote home for the war, known as the novel, Soldier Boy. Soldier Boy touched the hearts of many as he won the 2002 NSW’s Premier Literary Award for Books for Young Adults. It sold around approximately 80,000 copies and has been re-printed over 17 times.…

    • 294 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Have you ever wondered how tough it is for young people living in rough areas, to graduate High school? In The Boys of Baraka, Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady want to reach their young African American audience, to encourage them to graduate High school, and to not fall into peer pressure. The Boys of Baraka focuses of four boys: Devon, Montrey, Richard, and Romesh. These four young boys live in a neighborhood full of violence and drugs. Their lives at home aren’t any better; they have parents in jail, drug abuse, and single mothers.…

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kaffir Boy Analysis

    • 279 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Lead: One person can help make another person’s life better. Evidence from Kaffir Boy: In his memoir Kaffir Boy, Mark Mathabane recalls how his mother fought the racist Apartheid to allow him to attend school. “‘ But what a battle it was. It took me nearly a year a year to get all them papers together.’” Analysis:By giving him an education, she gave him an opportunity to have a life his illiterate friends from the gangs never could. This enabled him to escape the black ghetto of Alexandria, go to college in America, write a bestselling book and have a life far better than that of his father or mother. This shows not only that a person's life can be improved by others, but that education can create opportunities even in the most structurally…

    • 279 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Drummer Boy Analysis

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages

    ¨Nothing stayed put. Nothing had a name.Nothing was as it once was.¨ In ¨The Drummer Boy of Shiloh¨ by Ray Bradbury, Joby, the drummer boy, thinks he is not an important part of the war. He wants to be a soldier and have a gun but the general changes his mind by telling him how important he is to the army. And how, if the general were to die, he would be the general. After hearing this, Joby realizes how important he is to the army. Thus, becoming a proud drummer boy. In the story, there are symbols of hope, fatherhood, and strength. A symbol is something with a hidden meaning. In Bradbury's story there are the drummer boy symbolizes hope, the general symbolizes fatherhood, and The Battle Of Shiloh symbolizes strength.…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The novel opens up with a man, Lockwood, who rented a home in Thrushcross Grange in Yorkshire. He meets this housekeeper, Ellen Dean, who was very close with the Earnshaw family. Due to Lockwood’s curiosity, Ellen shares her knowledge about the history between the Earnshaw…

    • 525 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Poof! Brian vanishes. In the short story “The Boy Who Could Turn Into Things” by Stuart Baum, Brian a lonely boy who is always magically turning into things because he wants to be someone else because he is never noticed, hates himself for what he is and then learns to love himself in the end. I think this story's theme is about how Brian the lonely boy gets through his struggle and school and overcomes his loneliness.…

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jan Perkowski created a ten-part analysis outline to be used for analyzing different characteristics and functions of vampires that appear in film, television, and literature. This outline can be used to analyze the film The Lost Boys, and how the vampires in the film function as a metaphor for drug use, American nationalism, and a broken family structure, all of which were common in the 1980’s.…

    • 892 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The China Coin

    • 2602 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Novels for children which encompass notions about history, about culture, and about politics, have been around ever since a 'children's literature' was recognised as something distinct from books for adults. Indeed it is difficult to imagine something more political in its content and aspirations than Charles Kingsley's The Water Babies. But what is interesting today in the light of books for children now being published (and changing attitudes to children's fiction) is what a children's novel that has apparently been 'politicised' says about a literature specifically addressing a young audience. Allan Baillie's achievement. The China Coin, gives readers the opportunity to think in a broader sense about political novels for children and whether such books are in fact a successful way of introducing notions of political and cultural upheaval to the reader. Not only that The China Coin offers us a look at the scope of the novel in the wider field of Australian children's literature in general. What, say some, is the politics of China doing in a children's book? That question implies wider and highly significant issues about audience and the way we categorise a literature for children. And Allan Baillie's outstanding story is an excellent way of beginning to come to terms with such a debate.…

    • 2602 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Beautiful boy is by David Sheff is about his son Nic’s transformation from a sweet, intelligent, and outgoing child into a lying, cheating, stealing drug addict. Sheff’s life starts where a father should at the beggining of Nic’s birth. He detailed the many adventures that him and nick had before his painful divorce from Nic’s mother, that moved from San Fransisco to Los Angeles. Due to the divorce Nic was up for a custody arrangement that pulled him between the two places on a daily basis. The story continues its way through Sheff’s remarriage and the births of his two children, Jasper and Daisy. This leads lack of attention of Nic’s childhood. Nic is described as a young boy who is very smart aswell as creative and when Sheff first found…

    • 311 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Family and Ann

    • 1322 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Ann experiences a wealth of difficulties caring for Angus, she encounters emotional, physical, mental, social and financial demands as she tries to fulfil her role as carer. Ann was thrown into the role of carer when her mother had asked her to take of Angus on her deathbed. It was a role expected of Ann, she was the woman in the house and it was a role she had not been trained for. Caring for Angus presented many difficulties, Ann had given up her job to care for Angus thinking it would lessen the pressure she was feeling at that time, on the contrary, Ann now was experiencing the financial impact of only having her husband Bobs wage to support the family, this puts considerable strain on Ann as she is now solely reliant on her husband financially and the family are at risk of poverty. Bob and Angus have a strained relationship with both battling for Ann’s attention, Angus reminds Bob that he owns the house in which they all live in, this is demoralising for Bob. Ann states during interview that she feels like “piggy in the middle” torn between her obligation to Angus and to her own husband and child, Ann’s daughter Zoe has recently been diagnosed with dyslexia, she is experiencing difficulties at school, Zoe try’s to seek out support from her mother, Ann however is totally overwhelmed with caring for Angus and is unable to provide her…

    • 1322 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Let Them Call It Jazz

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Plot overview: The actions of the various Londoner’s (including Police) create difficulties for this woman who is an outsider. At first the victim of a crime - a set up which works to get her thrown out of her own flat - she is forced to leave and take up residence at a home in an exclusive area of London. She is pressured to stay by the gentleman who owns the house despite insistence on wanting to leave. Events slowly escalate for her, until she inadvertently becomes a criminal herself and thrown in jail, she loses hope, stops eating. She often does nothing to make things right, or acts in ways which further complicates her situation - drinking and taking “pain medication”, singing and throwing a rock through a window - but mostly she is the victim of her own passive, laid back ways and mindset which contrasts sharply with the uptight people around her. There is a major shift after she hears the “Holloway song” sung by a prison inmate whom she never sees. She begins to eat again, is bailed out of jail, moves to a new flat, takes a job, makes a new friend, and receives five pounds for inspiring a Jazz artist who interprets the bluesy Holloway song as an upbeat melody which becomes a successful song.…

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics