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No Boys Play Here: A Story of Shakespeare and My Familys Missing Men

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

No Boys Play Here: A Story of Shakespeare and My Familys Missing Men

Contributors:

By (Author) Sally Bayley

ISBN:

9780008318925

Publisher:

HarperCollins Publishers

Imprint:

William Collins

Publication Date:

22nd November 2022

UK Publication Date:

20th January 2022

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Other Subjects:

Memoirs
Autobiography: writers
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary studies: plays and playwrights

Dewey:

942.26

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

272

Dimensions:

Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 21mm

Weight:

240g

Description

Nobody writes like Sally Bayley Lemn Sissay

From the brilliantly original and critically acclaimed Sally Bayley, a literary story of working class childhood, absent or broken men and the power of literature to save and rebuild a world.
In Sally Bayleys childhood, the men were often missing. Missing because they were drunk, or out of work, or wandering. Or missing because their behaviour meant women banned them from the house.

The man who was around for Sally was Shakespeare, and he brought men with him to fill the gaps. Sally grew up with a troupe of sad kings and lonely heroes. Her mind ran away from home with Falstaff and Prince Hal, with deceivers and mavericks and geniuses.

In her signature and extraordinary style, this is Sallys story of her childhood one lived with darkness snapping at heels, with real and imagined people passing through interchangeably, and with trauma a spiky memory to be skirted and avoided.

Inventive, literary and adventurous, this is a story of hard childhood and a testament to the way that great literature and its characters can guard an imagination against the bad.

Reviews

Nobody writes like Sally Bayley
Lemn Sissay

Bayleys second volume of memoir is as original and moving as the first. Shakespeares characters walk with a family enacting their own tragedies and comedies as they struggle with poverty and illness. Bayleys bright, tight, sentences and tender wit create a truly child-like perspective which allows us to understand great pain. To be read by all educationalists
Kate Clanchy

An extended soliloquy, requiring and amply repaying an exercise of the readers imagination Bayleys prose style, freely associative, cryptically allusive, evocatively resonant has affinities with (Dylan Thomas)
Stanley Wells, TLS

Very powerful and moving With many insights into aspects of the way we live now
Marina Warner

Dances along the intersections of memoir, family history, literary criticism and autofiction Her writing is always fluid, playful, surprising and challenging. Ultimately, this is a book about healing, about how the characters of literature can help us re imagine and redeem the challenging people we encounter in our own lives
Alice Jolly

No Boys Play Here glitters Its a truism that reading shapes the way we see ourselves in the world, but this is something richer and stranger: it enabled Bayley to rescue and recreate herself. Someone should make a play of it
Guardian

No Boys Play Here zips by, its coming of age tale revealed in memorable scenes Bayleys writing flows with wit and clarity
Irish Examiner

We follow Bayley from her early childhood in a house ruled by women to the time when, aged fourteen, she gave herself up for adoption, in the face of enraged opposition from her aunt Bayleys adeptness with mobile identities, with class as well as gender, gives her unexpected sympathies
London Review of Books

'She writes with deliberately elusive lyricism, like all the best lines in a favourite song'
Oxford Review of Books

Author Bio

Sally Bayley is a Teaching and Research Fellow at the Rothermere American Institute at the University of Oxford and from September 2018 she will be teaching writing in Oxford as a Royal Literary Fund Fellow. Sally has written widely on visual responses to literature, including a jointly authored study of Sylvia Plath's relationship to the visual arts: Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath's Art of the Visual and a study of Plath as a cultural icon: Representing Sylvia Plath. In 2010 she completed a cross-media study of Emily Dickinson as a way of thinking about America's relationship to space and place: Home on the Horizon: America's Search for Space, from Emily Dickinson to Bob Dylan. She is the author of The Private Life of the Diary (Unbound, 2016).

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