A poignant & very personal childhood memoir of growing up in Cumbria during the Second World War & into the 1950s from columnist Hunter Davies Despite the struggle to make ends meet during the tough years of warfare in the 1940s & rationing persisting until the early 1950s life could still be sweet Especially if you were a young boy playing football with your pals saving up to go to the movies at the weekend & being captivated by the latest escapade of Dick Barton on the radio Chocolate might be scarce & bananas would be a pipe dream but you could still have fun In an excellent social memoir from one of the UK's premier columnists over the past five decades Hunter Davies captures this period beautifully His memoir of growing up in post-war North of England from 1945 onwards amid the immense damage wrought by the Second World War & the dreariness of life on rationing very little luxuries & an archaic educational system should be one that will resonate with thousands of readers across Britain In the same vein as Robert Douglas's Night Song of the Last Tramand Alan Johnson's This Boy Hunter's memories of a hard life laced with glorious moments of colour & emotion will certainly strike a vein with his generation