City of Belmont - Ruth Faulkner Public Library

Mother's boy, Howard Jacobson

Label
Mother's boy, Howard Jacobson
Language
eng
resource.biographical
autobiography
Illustrations
portraitsillustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Mother's boy
Responsibility statement
Howard Jacobson
Summary
Booker-Prize winner Howard Jacobson reveals how he became a writer. Born to a working-class family in 1940s Manchester, the great-grandson of Lithuanian and Russian immigrants, Jacobson was raised by his mother, grandmother and aunt Joyce. His father was a regimental tailor, as well as an upholsterer, a market-stall holder, a taxi driver, a balloonist, and a magician. Grappling always with his family's history and his Jewish identity, Jacobson takes us from the growing pains of childhood to studying at Cambridge under F.R. Leavis, and landing in Sydney as a maverick young professor on campus. After his first marriage and the birth of his son, he lived in places as disparate as London, Wolverhampton, Boscastle and Melbourne, and worked many different jobs to make ends meet, from selling handbags on a market stall, to teaching English in schools, universities and sometimes football stadiums, and even helping to run an Australian-inspired restaurant in the middle of Cornwall. Full of Jacobson's trademark humour and infused with bittersweet memories of his parents, this is the story of a writer's beginnings - as well as the twists and turns that life takes - and of learning to understand who you are before you can become the writer you were meant to be
Target audience
adult
resource.variantTitle
Mother's boy, a writer's beginnings
Classification

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