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Tangential lives

The malleableness of memoir
by
June–July 2014, no. 362

Meeting the Devil: A book of memoir from the London Review of Books edited by London Review of Books

William Heinemann, $49.99 hb, 388 pp, 9780434022670

Tangential lives

The malleableness of memoir
by
June–July 2014, no. 362

In his essay on James Bulger, the British toddler murdered by two ten-year-old boys in 1993, novelist Andrew O’Hagan tells the story of his own experience of childhood bullying – as the perpetrator, not the victim. Bulger’s ‘childish child-murderers’ remind him, he avers, of himself as a boy, and with this extraordinary expression of solidarity he launches into an account of the unremarkable violence layered into his own Scottish childhood, beginning with the story of how, at the age of six, he and a friend systematically beat a younger child to the point of serious injury.

Ann-Marie Priest reviews 'Meeting the Devil: A book of memoir from the London Review of Books' edited by London Review of Books

Meeting the Devil: A book of memoir from the London Review of Books

edited by London Review of Books

William Heinemann, $49.99 hb, 388 pp, 9780434022670

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Comment (1)

  • Just love the 'look' of your website...very stylish and easy to read and navigate. Well done to all.
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    03 July 2014

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