Page 42 of A Man of his Time


  ‘One of the modern writers I like is John King. I thought The Football Factory, which they’ve made into a film, was excellent; he’s a very fine writer. I tend to read a lot of writers from Israel – David Grossman, Amos Oz – there’s plenty of good stuff at the moment. I’ve just come to the end of a long novel by Oz, a story of life and death, that’s simply wonderful, but I’d recommend his autobiography, A Tale of Love and Darkness; it’s translated by Nicholas de Lange, who is first rate.’

  The Nottingham Books

  A MAN OF HIS TIME concludes a series of Sillitoe’s novels and stories – beginning with Saturday Night and Sunday Morning–that feature various members of the Seaton family. Below is a complete list of Sillitoe’s Nottingham books.

  1. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958)

  2. Key to the Door (1961)

  3. Raw Material (1972)

  4. The Storyteller (1979)

  5. Down from the Hill (1984)

  6. The Open Door (1989)

  7. Leonard’s War (1991)

  8. The Broken Chariot (1998)

  9. Birthday (2001)

  10. New and Collected Stories (2003)

  11. A Man of His Time (2004)

  For anyone wanting to discover more about the man who inspired the fictional Ernest Burton, Sillitoe’s novelistic memoir Raw Material (1972) and his compelling and beautifully written autobiography Life Without Armour (1995) are well worth seeking out.

  Have You Read?

  Other titles by Alan Sillitoe

  Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958)

  Working all day at a lathe leaves Arthur Seaton with energy to spare in the evenings. A hard-drinking, hard-fighting young rebel of a man, he knows what he wants and he’s sharp enough to get it. And before long, his carryings-on with a couple of married women are local gossip. But then one evening he meets a young girl in a pub, and Arthur’s life begins to look less simple.

  Alan Sillitoe’s classic novel of the 1950s is a story of timeless significance.

  ‘A novel of today with a freshness and raw fury that makes Room at the Top look like a vicarage tea party’

  Daily Telegraph

  ‘His writing has real experience in it and an instinctive accuracy that never loses its touch. His book has a glow about it as though he had plugged it into some basic source of the working-class spirit’

  Guardian

  ‘Brilliant … if he never writes anything more, he has assured himself a place in the history of the English novel’

  New Yorker

  The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1959)

  Smith is an incorrigible and defiant young rebel, inhabiting a no-man’s land of institutionalized Borstal. Watched over by an indifferent sunlight, as his steady jog-trot rhythm transports him over an unrelenting, frostbitten earth, he wonders why, for whom and for what he is running.

  ‘Graphic, tough, outspoken, informal’

  The Times

  ‘A beautiful piece of work, confirming Sillitoe as a writer of unusual spirit and great promise’

  Guardian

  The Broken Chariot (1998)

  When Herbert Thurgarton-Strang was seven, his parents – as loving, as doting as any parents of their generation – took him away from India and left him in a boarding school in England.

  Through the years which follow, Herbert is held together by his desire for revenge on those loving parents, and by the knowledge that, out there, a new world beckons.

  And when he’s seventeen, he steals away from school and becomes a different person.

  ‘Sillitoe’s sheer narrative drive manages to suspend most of the reader’s disbelief. This is an old-fashioned novel – technically conventional, pulling off the usual tricks of character and motivation – but oddly alive in a way that a great deal of modern fiction, written by those as yet unborn when Sillitoe began his career, patently is not’

  Mail on Sunday

  ‘The Broken Chariot explores familiar themes for Sillitoe: working in factories, drinking in pubs and chasing women in post-war Nottingham. But the writer has found a fresh, new approach to his specialist subject; one that again allows him to tackle the issue of class in a way that is often surprising and always entertaining’

  Yorkshire Post

  Birthday (2001)

  Birthday is the long-awaited sequel to Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. Four decades on from the novel which was at the forefront of the new wave of British literature, we rediscover the Seaton brothers: older, certainly; wiser – possibly not.

  ‘Sequels are seldom better than the original but this one is’

  Allan Massie

  ‘There are parallels here with Kingsley Amis’s The Old Devils – another old man’s book about old age. But it is well worth reading, both for its evocation of a vanished way of working-class life, and for its steadfast depiction of the horrors of old age and the valour and comradeship that can, in part at least, redeem it’

  Daily Telegraph

  If You Loved This, You’ll Like …

  Silvertown

  by Melanie McGrath

  An evocative novelistic portrait of London’s now vanished East End – a world of docks, disease, grim tenements, bread and dripping and the dogs – dominated by McGrath’s testy grandmother, Jenny Fulcher.

  Ulverton

  by Adam Thorpe

  This panoramic, ingenious novel chronicles 350 years in the life of a rural English village.

  Living

  by Henry Green

  Set in an iron foundry in Birmingham, Green’s 1929 novel grittily and entertainingly parallels the lives of the workers and the owners.

  Another World

  by Pat Barker

  Barker’s powerful novel looks at a family haunted by events dating back to the First World War.

  The Web Detective

  http://www.nottinghamcity.gov.uk

  The city’s official site.

  http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk

  Nottingham news engine.

  http://www.cressbrook.co.uk/matlock.html

  Tourist information site for Matlock.

  http://www.raleighbikes.com/home.html

  Raleigh Bikes of Nottingham’s website – although the cycle factory on Triumph Road has now been demolished.

  http://www.nottinghamgallery.co.uk

  This site offers a photographic survey of Nottingham past and present.

  About the Author

  Alan Sillitoe left school at fourteen to work in various factories until becoming an air traffic control assistant with the Ministry of Aircraft Production in 1945. He began writing after four years in the RAF, and lived for six years in France and Spain. In 1958, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning was published, and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner, which won the Hawthornden Prize for Literature, came out the following year. Both these books were made into films.

  Other Works

  Also by Alan Sillitoe

  FICTION

  Saturday Night and Sunday Morning

  The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner

  The General

  Key to the Door

  The Ragman’s Daughter

  The Death of William Posters

  A Tree on Fire

  Guzman, Go Home

  A Start in Life

  Travels in Nihilon

  Raw Material

  Men, Women and Children

  The Flame of Life

  The Widower’s Son

  The Storyteller

  The Second Chance and Other Stories

  Her Victory

  The Lost Flying Boat

  Down From the Hill

  Life Goes On

  Out of the Whirlpool

  The Open Door

  Last Loves

  Leonard’s War

  Snowstop

  Collected Stories

  Alligator Playground

  The Broken Chariot

  The German Numbers Woman

 
Birthday

  NON-FICTION

  Life Without Armour (Autobiography)

  POETRY

  The Rats and Other Poems

  A Falling Out of Love and Other Poems

  Love in the Environs of Voronezh and Other Poems

  Storm and Other Poems

  Snow on the North Side of Lucifer

  Sun Before Departure

  Tides and Stone Walls

  Collected Poems

  PLAYS

  All Citizens are Soldiers (with Ruth Fainlight)

  Three Plays

  ESSAYS

  Mountains and Caverns

  FOR CHILDREN

  The City Adventures of Marmalade Jim

  Big John and the Stars

  The Incredible Fencing Fleas

  Marmalade Jim on the Farm

  Marmalade Jim and the Fox

  Copyright

  Fourth Estate

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers

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  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  This edition published by Harper Perennial 2005

  First published by Flamingo 2004

  Copyright © Alan Sillitoe 2004

  PS section copyright © Travis Elborough 2005

  PS™ is a trademark of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd

  Alan Sillitoe asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this ebook onscreen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  Source ISBN 9780007173280

  Ebook Edition © SEPTEMBER 2013 ISBN 9780007439980

  Version 2013-08-19

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  Alan Sillitoe, A Man of his Time

 


 

 
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