He Called Me Son

In Post War London in the dingy flat he shares with his mother and sister, nine year old Tony Addington dreams of two things: a father who isn’t a drunken womaniser and who cares enough to stick around; and getting off The Blountmere Street School “Poor List”.

Both these aspirations are fulfilled for a short time when Fred Stannard becomes their lodger. However, this is short-lived and the fabric of Tony’s life once again becomes frayed. With the deterioration of his mother’s health and admittance into hospital, Tony and his sister, Angela, are snatched from their home and placed in separate orphanages. He is not allowed to contact his family and they have no idea where he has been taken. Subsequently, Tony is told his mother has died and he is being sent to New Zealand as part of the British Government’s Child Migration Scheme.

In New Zealand, Tony, together with another boy, Joe, from the orphanage, is put to work on a remote farm in the mountain foothills of the South Island. The work is hard and lonely. They are often hungry, receive no pay or education and live in what is nothing more than a shack with two older farm workers.

In the face of Eleod Downston’s cruelty and abuse, Tony struggles to deal with his grief and works at hanging on to his memories of his family and friends in Blountmere Street, especially ‘The Gang’ he played with on their bombsite camp, and Paula, the girl downstairs, with whom he shared a secret friendship.

When they are fifteen Tony and Joe finally escape from Eleod Downston and find work on another farm. It is here that Tony gets to wear shoes that fit, pants that don’t cut into his crutch and shirts that extend beyond his navel. At last he receives a wage, the education he has missed and starts his search for his family, for Fred, Paula and the truth.

1117564071
He Called Me Son

In Post War London in the dingy flat he shares with his mother and sister, nine year old Tony Addington dreams of two things: a father who isn’t a drunken womaniser and who cares enough to stick around; and getting off The Blountmere Street School “Poor List”.

Both these aspirations are fulfilled for a short time when Fred Stannard becomes their lodger. However, this is short-lived and the fabric of Tony’s life once again becomes frayed. With the deterioration of his mother’s health and admittance into hospital, Tony and his sister, Angela, are snatched from their home and placed in separate orphanages. He is not allowed to contact his family and they have no idea where he has been taken. Subsequently, Tony is told his mother has died and he is being sent to New Zealand as part of the British Government’s Child Migration Scheme.

In New Zealand, Tony, together with another boy, Joe, from the orphanage, is put to work on a remote farm in the mountain foothills of the South Island. The work is hard and lonely. They are often hungry, receive no pay or education and live in what is nothing more than a shack with two older farm workers.

In the face of Eleod Downston’s cruelty and abuse, Tony struggles to deal with his grief and works at hanging on to his memories of his family and friends in Blountmere Street, especially ‘The Gang’ he played with on their bombsite camp, and Paula, the girl downstairs, with whom he shared a secret friendship.

When they are fifteen Tony and Joe finally escape from Eleod Downston and find work on another farm. It is here that Tony gets to wear shoes that fit, pants that don’t cut into his crutch and shirts that extend beyond his navel. At last he receives a wage, the education he has missed and starts his search for his family, for Fred, Paula and the truth.

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He Called Me Son

He Called Me Son

by Barbara Arnold
He Called Me Son

He Called Me Son

by Barbara Arnold

eBook

$5.99 

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Overview

In Post War London in the dingy flat he shares with his mother and sister, nine year old Tony Addington dreams of two things: a father who isn’t a drunken womaniser and who cares enough to stick around; and getting off The Blountmere Street School “Poor List”.

Both these aspirations are fulfilled for a short time when Fred Stannard becomes their lodger. However, this is short-lived and the fabric of Tony’s life once again becomes frayed. With the deterioration of his mother’s health and admittance into hospital, Tony and his sister, Angela, are snatched from their home and placed in separate orphanages. He is not allowed to contact his family and they have no idea where he has been taken. Subsequently, Tony is told his mother has died and he is being sent to New Zealand as part of the British Government’s Child Migration Scheme.

In New Zealand, Tony, together with another boy, Joe, from the orphanage, is put to work on a remote farm in the mountain foothills of the South Island. The work is hard and lonely. They are often hungry, receive no pay or education and live in what is nothing more than a shack with two older farm workers.

In the face of Eleod Downston’s cruelty and abuse, Tony struggles to deal with his grief and works at hanging on to his memories of his family and friends in Blountmere Street, especially ‘The Gang’ he played with on their bombsite camp, and Paula, the girl downstairs, with whom he shared a secret friendship.

When they are fifteen Tony and Joe finally escape from Eleod Downston and find work on another farm. It is here that Tony gets to wear shoes that fit, pants that don’t cut into his crutch and shirts that extend beyond his navel. At last he receives a wage, the education he has missed and starts his search for his family, for Fred, Paula and the truth.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045468695
Publisher: Imaga AS Hörspiel GmbH
Publication date: 07/11/2011
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 332 KB

About the Author

"I'm going to write a book one day." How many times have you heard someone say it, as if they'll dash one off while they're on the number seven bus. I suppose I was the same, although I stayed at the boasting stage, and never got to the 'dashing one off' process. Following three years of homesickness, I began asking myself now I was in New Zealand, what was I going to do? Indeed, what did I want to do? And there it was: Write! I wanted to write. I enrolled in a creative writing class. I loved it. I had arrived. How little I knew! How simple it seemed. Some of the things I discovered are: Writing is a craft. My style is uniquely mine. I'm a novelist. Editing takes longer than writing. Writing can be lonely and I need other writers. Rejection is devastating. Acceptance is sweet. Writing has little to do with inspiration. It has to do with perseverance. Barbara holds private courses, in the North Island of New Zealand, for groups and individuals who want to learn the mechanics of writing which include idea gathering, good beginnings that capture interest, developing characters readers will want to follow through a whole story; realistic dialogue; use of good and effective language; creating conflict; showing versus telling; endings, and much more. I hope you enjoy my books as much as I enjoyed writing them. Best wishes: Barbara Arnold.

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