All Our Books

A Daughter of the State

2023-02-03T11:53:33+00:00

In this poignant book, the author writes with candour about her experience of growing up in a workhouse children’s home in London during the Twenties and Thirties. Kathleen Dalley’s story is told with clarity and sensitivity, yet refrains from sentimentality. She describes an institutionalised childhood where strict members of staff upheld the rules and procedures [...]

Our Small Corner (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:54:08+00:00

This 1994 autobiography is the sequel to Sid Manville’s Everything Seems Smaller. It recalls memories of friends, neighbours and relatives who made up the 'small corner' of Sid’s neighbourhood in Bear Road in Brighton in the Twenties and Thirties. Sid writes with much affection and humour, although he doesn’t forget that this era was also [...]

Boxing Day Baby (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:54:07+00:00

Barbara Chapman was born in Brighton on a snowy Boxing Day in 1927. In this 1994 autobiography, she reminisces about her early childhood; focusing on her memories of home and school, and the effects of the Second World War on herself, her family, and the community. Barbara shares her experiences of working life in the [...]

International Service (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:54:20+00:00

With its backdrop of Brighton in the Second World War, International Service tells the tale of Kathleen Wilson’s naive teenage years, leaving school at 14 on the outbreak of war to work in a factory, going on to work in a baker’s, as a domestic help and in the grocery trade. Kathleen lived in the shadow of [...]

Just one of a Large Family (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:54:05+00:00

This 1992 book is a personal account of living in the Tenantry Down neighbourhood of Brighton in the1920s and 30s. Don Carter describes his childhood in the Hartington Road area of Brighton, where nearly all the roads are named after places in the Isle of Wight. Don can claim to be a true Brightonian, having [...]

Brighton Boy: A fifties childhood (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:53:17+00:00

This 1994 memoir is a schoolboy’s tale of Brighton in the 1950s, seen through the eyes of Andy Steer. He recalls Brighton characters and shops, swimming at Black Rock and with the “Shiverers” Swimming Club at the salt-water King Alfred pool in Hove; Stanford Road School, the now defunct Brighton Cycle Club and playing in [...]

Moulsecoomb Days 1922-1947 (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:54:02+00:00

In her 1990 autobiography, Ruby Dunn recalls the development of Moulsecoomb, then a rural outskirt of Brighton, into a post-World War One “garden suburb”. The early residents of the community had no school or church, but they were proud of their new electric cookers and semi-detached houses set in a valley with gardens filled with [...]

Those Lost Years (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:54:12+00:00

Mary Adams was born in 1930 in Birmingham. The first part of her 1995 memoir recalls her early life when she was sent to a residential school in Hertfordshire at the age of four, transferred to a school in Surrey before the outbreak of World War Two, and then to a convent school in Devon. [...]

Missing the Nile: Experiences of Sudanese people in Brighton (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:53:13+00:00

Published in 2005, this fascinating book looks at the customs and culture of the Sudanese community in the Brighton and Hove area. The British and Sudanese cultures are very different to one another and the narrative includes comparisons of the two cultures, as well as giving first-hand descriptions of festivals, celebrations including weddings and funerals, [...]

The Deckchair Guide to Brighton & Hove (Out of Print)

2023-02-03T11:53:14+00:00

Brighton & Hove is a multi-faceted city and it is possibly its trendy, cosmopolitan side that most people recognise. Local residents however are familiar with a much more fascinating, diverse place. What is it really like to live here? Is it just ‘London by the sea’ as the media portrays? Or does it have its [...]

Roofless: Homeless in Brighton (PDF download)

2023-02-03T11:53:32+00:00

Roofless is a collection of photographs, essays, stories and poems by homeless and ex-homeless people from Brighton. It is about survival, about battling poverty, rejection, violence, ill health and loneliness. There is anger, sadness and rebellion, but also instances of hope and solidarity and writing that, whilst often raw and uncompromising, possesses a surprising generosity [...]

Alt-History: New Writing From Brighton (Out of Print)

2023-02-03T11:53:00+00:00

This diverse collection called Alt-History: New Writing From Brighton, consists of fifteen stories by new writers, including five pieces of work by young authors under the age of twelve. The aim of the publication was to allow people the opportunity to write their own versions of ‘histories’ of Brighton and Hove and the material includes [...]

Brighton On The Rocks (out of print)

2023-02-03T11:52:36+00:00

Published in 1983, Brighton on the Rocks incorporates a collection of interviews, photographs and statistics, which are used to analyse how monetarism affected the economic policies that were pursued by the city’s local authorities in the 1980s. When local councils imposed financial cuts from 1980 onwards, they argued that the cuts were necessary because of overspending. [...]

Letter in the Attic Journal (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:52:58+00:00

This journal was produced by the Letter in the Attic project and was a way in which people could do their own writing, illustrated with quotes and pictures from the Letter in the Attic collection. It contains images, photographs, quotes and pictures from letters and diaries related to Brighton and Hove from the last 150 years. These were [...]

Brighton Behind the Front

2023-02-03T11:53:44+00:00

Originally produced in 1990 in collaboration with the now defunct Lewis Cohen Urban Studies Centre, Brighton Behind the Front brings together a collection of Brighton World War II reminiscences and documents how ordinary people were affected by the war, offering moving accounts of individual lives set against a society undergoing profound changes. Using personal recollections, contemporary photographs, letters, a logbook and diaries, the book vividly portrays what it was like to live in Brighton during the Second World War. You can buy copies of the book using Amazon Kindle, Google Play, the Apple store, and other Android outlets - just go to your chosen website and search by title for the book.

The Children’s Millennium Diary Anthology (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:24+00:00

This anthology presents a child’s-eye view of the year 2000. It includes drawings and words that reflect the perspectives and views of children aged between five and eleven. The book was compiled from one-week diaries, written over the course of the Millenium Year, by four hundred school children in the Brighton and Hove area. There [...]

Take Him Away

2023-02-03T11:54:23+00:00

Written in prison at the age of 62, this autobiography begins with Ron Piper as a boy of seven, clambering around bombsites looking for shrapnel and ends with his appearance in the dock at The Old Bailey, as a notorious career criminal. It's a powerful wartime record of the author’s steady progress towards a life of [...]

Les Moss – Live and Learn

2023-02-03T11:53:58+00:00

Les Moss tells of his lifelong struggle in search of progress, and his personal triumph over adversity. Published in 1979, this fascinating life history describes one man’s involvement in trade unionism and provides a picture of political activism in London and Brighton from the 1920s onward. Also documented are the daily and working lives of [...]

George Noakes – To Be a Farmer’s Boy

2023-02-03T11:53:56+00:00

This autobiography tells of George Noakes's childhood and early adult working life before he married Daisy, author of The Town Beehive and The Faded Rainbow, in 1934. George reminisces about his childhood farm memories and forays to the local shops and surrounding areas; for example, when he visited the local bakers, he always knew that [...]

School Reports (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:22+00:00

This book contains reminiscences and anecdotes from past pupils who attended St. Luke’s School, in the Queens Park area of Brighton in the years between 1908 - 1983. It contains an eclectic mix of anecdotes that express both fond memories and less happy recollections of pupils’ schoolday experiences and the reality of belonging to a [...]

John Knight – A Ha’p’orth of Sweets (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:03+00:00

This is a child’s-eye view of carefree times spent in the 1930s and the more difficult times experienced in the 1940s, in the poverty-stricken Albion Hill area of Brighton. Meet the characters in John Knight’s resilient family unit - above all, his parents, who were determined to shield their offspring from the hardships of their [...]

Stroke: Who Cares? (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:05+00:00

Continuing the theme of working with people who have suffered strokes, this book is intended as both a self-help aid and as a helpful guide that can provide support to others in similar situations. It is written by five people with experience of caring for a close relative who has suffered a stroke. The process [...]

Life After Stroke (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:05+00:00

This is an account of stroke survivors’ triumphs over adversity, as they undertake the difficult and painful process of learning how to live again. The book examines the lasting effects of degenerative trauma and documents the transition from being able-bodied to becoming disabled. Writing is viewed as part of the process of rehabilitation, as the [...]

Growing Up in Ditchling (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:18+00:00

This is a beautifully illustrated account of life as an adolescent girl, growing up in the rural Sussex village of Ditchling between the First and Second World Wars. Doris Hall describes the details and events of her daily life in an environment where she was able to develop peacefully and happily, surrounded by family, friends [...]

I Do Like to be Beside the Seaside (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:06+00:00

This selection of creative writing is the cumulative work of fifty people, who attended a writing weekend in Seaford, East Sussex in July 1993. There were four workshops in total, including one on autobiography and personal histories, one on poetry, one on storytelling from images and one on drama. From the beginning of the course, [...]

The Church Round The Corner

2023-02-03T11:53:20+00:00

This intelligently written book examines the social and religious history of St. Anne’s Church, which was located in the heart of Brighton. Maurice Packman, the author, was a choirboy at St. Anne’s in the 1930s and he takes a gently humorous look at the community of his fellow worshippers. The church has been demolished, but [...]

Brighton at War Calendar (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:29+00:00

This evocative collection of photographs shows Brighton during WWII. Kindly reproduced here under licence from The Argus and The Royal Pavilion and Museums, Brighton & Hove, most of these images haven’t been seen by the public for many years. From soldiers marching past the Savoy cinema in East Street to a St Paul’s Street party [...]

Lost Streets of Brighton Calendar (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:28+00:00

In the late 1950s the Environmental Health Department of the former Brighton Borough Council commissioned a series of photographs to form a visual record of areas being considered for slum clearance. Some of the striking and evocotive photographs taken are featured in this 2007 calendar. Thanks to Kevin Bacon at The Brighton History Centre for allowing [...]

Lost Shops of Brighton Calendar (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:28+00:00

This calendar follows on from 2007’s successful Lost Streets of Brighton and features photographs of shops, most of which are previously unseen by the public. All the shops have long since disappeared. Viewed together, they conjure up an evocative portrait of Brighton's past. Thanks to The Royal Pavilion and Museums Brighton & Hove, David Carrington and [...]

The Faith Project (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:25+00:00

The Faith Project used oral history and video work to help members of the Sudanese Coptic, Muslim and Progressive Jewish communities to collate a history of how and why the followers of these faiths arrived in Brighton and the traditions and customs that they brought with them. Project extracts are featured in this book which [...]

Me and My Mum (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:20+00:00

These childhood reminiscences examine the special and unbreakable bond between mothers and their daughters. Through the story of five daughters and their relationships with their mothers, the book charts the positive and negative experiences of family life. In particular, it examines the influence that their mothers had on their development as women and individuals in [...]

Hard Times and Easy Terms (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:19+00:00

This is the entertaining story of a young cockney, who was something of a ‘wide boy’. Originally from London, Bert Healey’s story begins with tales of his life as a wayward boy in Brighton during the First World War. He also describes many aspects of his working life - from his first pay packet, when [...]

The Circle of Life (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:18+00:00

This is Olive Masterson’s tale of growing up in the Richmond Road area of Brighton between the Wars. Surrounded by her close-knit family and friends, she was the youngest child of four, and lived a varied and interesting life. In her narrative, she voices the hopes and fears that she experienced in making the often [...]

Faded Rainbow

2023-02-03T11:54:16+00:00

This autobiography gives a poignant insight into the life and expectations of a working class Brighton girl, who from the age of fourteen, was in service from 1910 to 1934. It describes her life as a young wife and mother, and the isolation she felt living in the countryside surrounding Gatwick Airfield. Daisy examines the [...]

Always a Layman

2023-02-03T11:54:14+00:00

This fascinating personal history describes John Langley's childhood in poverty in Hove before the First World War, his apprenticeship at the age of 13 on the railway in Brighton, the progression of his career as a railway carriage painter and the good and bad times of Brighton family life. The account of the harshness of working [...]

The Sudden Change in My Life (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:10+00:00

Gary Irwin survived major surgery to remove a brain tumour. In this book, he takes the reader on a journey that charts the progress of his illness, including the invasive and traumatic surgery that he underwent. He documents the long process of initial diagnosis, treatment and eventual recuperation. This first-hand account is narrated from the [...]

Bad Dog Wally (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:09+00:00

Bad Dog Wally is the story of a dog that was rescued from Battersea Dogs Home, consisting almost entirely of cartoons with only minimal use of the written word. Each page is based on an event in Wally's life, and contains one sentence that is graphically illustrated. At first glance, the cartoons appear naive and childlike, [...]

Poetry Anthology I (Out of print)

2023-02-03T11:54:08+00:00

However people personally define poetry, this anthology contains something for everyone. The poets all hail from the Brighton area and they reflect a wide range of ages and backgrounds. The poems can read by those who are looking for a pleasant read, by the poetry connoisseur or the serious academic. They include many different themes, [...]

Alf Johns – Who Stood Idly By (Out of Print)

2023-02-03T11:53:57+00:00

Published in 1984 and written by a retired hospital porter, Alf Johns highlights what he saw as the failures of the government in the 1980s and early 1990s.  Satirical and witty, this is a book containing political poems and cartoons, exhibiting a wry, often black sense of humour, the subject matter centres around the politics [...]

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