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A racing journalist himself, Roger Mortimer wrote for a living, yet still wrote more than 150 letters to his son as he left school, and lived in places such as South America, Africa, Weston-super-Mare and eventually London. These letters form a memoir of their relationship, and an affectionate portrait of a time gone by.
Reviews / Votes
As well as being the funniest book I've read in ages, it's also extremely touching. A delight then, on every front. * The Spectator * By turns exasperated, affectionate, touching and wry, the letters brim with a father's love for his son. An absolute delight. * Daily Mail * ...this book makes you cry as well as laugh. -- Charles Moore * Daily Telegraph * These hilarious missives from an eccentric father to an errant son have all the playful oddity of the Dear Bill letters. * Sunday Times * Very, very funny. * Sunday Times * A collection of brilliantly written letters from a world-weary father to his feckless son. They could offer a money back guarantee if you don't laugh - the publishers' money would be safe. -- Jeremy Paxman * Guardian Books of the Year * In an era when letter writing is a vanishing art form, this idiosyncratic collection from a father to his errant son is a delight. * Telegraph * Herein is comedy gold... a delight, a labour of fatherly love in which a deep if slightly exasperated affection is always legible between the lines. * Racing Post * Affectionate... a poignant biography. * Oldie * Entirely delightful: funny, wise and full of insights into the relationship between fathers and sons. * The Lady * Witty and affectionate. Letter writing might be a dying art, but this book proves what a glorious art it is. * Tatler * Wry trenchant, often extremely funny, but also charmingly forbearing and forgiving. * Country Life * An examination of the father/son relationship and a snapshot of 1960s and 1970s society in all its contemporaneous freshness... never loses its ability to make the reader laugh. * Country Life * 'these often exasperated but hilarious letters should be required reading by all young things who think they know better. Charlie says this book is a tribute to his father and what a fine tribute it is. Roger's optimism in the most unpromising of circumstances will stay with you long after his last delightful letter is read.' * Sunday Express * Poignant, waspish and gossipy, it is also very, very funny. * Mail Online *More details
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