Those Flat Share Girls (Oh, How They Laughed)

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A01=Stuart Duncan
Author_Stuart Duncan
Category=D
Category=DC
Category=DCF
Category=DNC
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
Fishmongers Arms Wood Green
Flamingo Club
Funerals
Hippie Trail
James Elroy Flecker
Marquee
Marquee and Flamingo Clubs
Marquee club
Mayfair Coffee Bar
Mayfair Coffee Bar Southgate
Metroland
Pennine Way
Ronnie Scotts Club
Sixties London
Southgate County Grammar School
Teenage Parties
Unconsummated love
Weddings

Product details

  • ISBN 9781839525933
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Mar 2023
  • Publisher: The Self-Publishing Partnership Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Those Flat Share Girls is a collection of light verse, written in easy to read rhyming couplets, containing an old man’s recollections of his young life in London in the 1960s. It begins in January 1960, when he bids his school goodbye with the thought that:

I knew I’d never use again

            A logarithm or a sine

            But the trappings of a cultured mind

            I knew exactly where to find.

And, not long after this, while strolling to a local coffee bar, he and a friend sense that:

            There was a fire about to burn

And of that flame we had both caught a spark.

That warm summer’s evening in Grovelands Park.

And so, life moves forward through the years with the usual parties and musical delights of the superb jazz bands to be found performing in the back rooms of pubs for twopence ha’penny and the emerging electric bands who would sell black rhythm and blues back to the USA. Unfortunately, he misses most of this scene’s excitement because:

            Far from the fuss and ballyhoo

            I was on my way to Kathmandu

On what became known as the Hippie Trail. Then onwards to a couple of years in Australia as a roustabout ‘swagman’.

A few further adventures follow, an attempt to walk the Pennine Way amongst them; and there are several unconsummated romances along the way until he eventually finds himself ‘complete’ in the comforting arms of a loving wife.

And finally, back in a local park, an old man minding a friend’s dog. He sits observing the changed world of 2022, sixty odd years after he sensed a fire about to burn and ponders contentedly:

            There really is no better place

            To see first-hand the changing face

            Of our noble, ancient ‘Island Race’

            Than in a local park on a Sunday morn …

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