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Becoming Henry
Becoming Henry
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€17.99
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1970s Britain
A01=Graham Strugnell
adolescence
adolescent desire
anorexia in boys
Author_Graham Strugnell
British suburban life
Category=FBA
Category=FS
Category=FU
Category=FXB
class and aspiration
comic voice
coming-of-age
dark humour
emotional isolation
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
family relationships
identity and belonging
literary fiction
male adolescence
masculinity
outsider narrative
psychological insight
self-image
South London
teenage misfit
Product details
- ISBN 9781917000093
- Weight: 352g
- Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
- Publication Date: 26 Sep 2025
- Publisher: Constellations Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
Set in South London during the 1970s, Becoming Henry is a sharply observed, big-hearted and brilliantly funny coming-of-age novel. Henry has grand ideas and even grander ambitions. He longs to be recognised - by his family, his peers, and the world - as the comic genius he believes himself to be.
Told with emotional precision and wry humour, the story traces Henry's life from his earliest memories in a conventional, emotionally constrained household to the brink of adulthood. Raised in a family where tenderness is elusive and communication often tips into absurdity, Henry finds early refuge in his imagination, music, and books.
Adolescence brings contradictions: Henry's idealised sense of himself clashes with a desperate need for connection - particularly romantic or sexual. As he enters his teens, his desire to be desired, combined with a fear of not being enough, results in a phase of anorexia and self-effacement. He lurches from one misjudged crush to another, suffering social humiliations, but also forming deep bonds with other misfit boys who share his anarchic sense of humour.
With wit, psychological insight and finesse, the novel explores themes of identity, aspiration, class, and masculinity. It captures the ache of wanting to belong while needing to be seen as different - the longing to be both accepted and exceptional - and the lengths one boy will go to in order to matter.
Blending the depth of literary fiction with the accessibility of great storytelling, Becoming Henry is a poignant, funny, and unforgettable portrait of growing up on the fringes.
Told with emotional precision and wry humour, the story traces Henry's life from his earliest memories in a conventional, emotionally constrained household to the brink of adulthood. Raised in a family where tenderness is elusive and communication often tips into absurdity, Henry finds early refuge in his imagination, music, and books.
Adolescence brings contradictions: Henry's idealised sense of himself clashes with a desperate need for connection - particularly romantic or sexual. As he enters his teens, his desire to be desired, combined with a fear of not being enough, results in a phase of anorexia and self-effacement. He lurches from one misjudged crush to another, suffering social humiliations, but also forming deep bonds with other misfit boys who share his anarchic sense of humour.
With wit, psychological insight and finesse, the novel explores themes of identity, aspiration, class, and masculinity. It captures the ache of wanting to belong while needing to be seen as different - the longing to be both accepted and exceptional - and the lengths one boy will go to in order to matter.
Blending the depth of literary fiction with the accessibility of great storytelling, Becoming Henry is a poignant, funny, and unforgettable portrait of growing up on the fringes.
Graham Strugnell was born in Wallington, Surrey, in 1961. In a life filled with adventure and mishap, he failed his 11+, faked his way into grammar school and blundered through his teenage years. After a bureaucratic oversight, he found himself at Oxford University in the 1980s. He then turned his hand to journalism, working briefly for a free newspaper and as a freelancer, where his stories of life as a hapless bachelor met with some acclaim. Later, he succumbed to the lure of abroad, living and teaching for many years in Japan.
On his return to the UK, he became a teacher, journalist, musician and playwright, mainly of school plays that baffled audiences with their scale and ambition. He now lives quietly with his wife and son in deepest Devon where he teaches on zoom.
On his return to the UK, he became a teacher, journalist, musician and playwright, mainly of school plays that baffled audiences with their scale and ambition. He now lives quietly with his wife and son in deepest Devon where he teaches on zoom.
Becoming Henry
€17.99
