This ham has been smoked for 6 hours and is a delicious feast in a honey glazed binding that will give you satisfaction from start to mid chapter 4, spoils in the end.
FRANK TILSLEY (1904–1957) British Novelist and Broadcaster
Portrait by Howard Coster (1938) ; Collection: National Portrait Gallery
Frank Vincent Tilsley was a British novelist, born in Lancashire on 5 May 1904. He grew up in Manchester, where he was educated at Chapel Street Council School, Levenshulme. After working in various capacities, including as an accountant's clerk and a schoolteacher, he became a full-time author following the success of his first novel, Plebeian's Progress (1933). Frank Tilsley was a realist yet with a great understanding and compassion for human beings. The 1930s were the great age of working-class literature, and the work was highly valued for the authenticity of its critical depiction of working-class conditions in a period of economic depression. He published some twenty subsequent novels, which based their robustly straightforward narratives on detailed reportage of contemporary social conditions. Titles include She Was There Too (1938), Pleasure Beach (1944), Champion Road (1948), Heaven and Herbert Common (1953), and Brother Nap (1954). Tilsley was also a frequent radio broadcaster and from 1950 onward won considerable acclaim as a television dramatist. He was a staunch socialist all his life, a fully paid-up member of the Labour Party, and personal friend to Nye Bevan and H. G. Wells, who was godfather to my aunt. In 1939 The Labour Book service published his book of of social and political philosophy, We Live and Learn.
He was too young to fight in WWI, but lost an elder brother and an uncle, which affected him profoundly. He was too old to fight in WWII, but was a proud member of the Home Guard. He was already writing articles about the war for the ‘Manchester Guardian’, as it was then known before the name was shortened to ‘The Guardian’, and he was then posted to the RAF as a war correspondent. He was stationed with Coastal Command and given the nominal rank of Squadron Leader so that he could access all areas. He was an observer on many missions.
His time with the RAF gave him new subject matter for his stories. Boys of Coastal published in 1945, under the name Squadron Leader Frank Tilsley, is a selection of poignant short stories about Coastal Command, illustrated with black & white photographs. It is based on the experiences of aircrews and ground-staff, written by him with intimate knowledge of its operation and of its people. He used two writing pseudonyms during this time because of the controversial subject matter of the work: Little Man This Now was first published in 1940 under the pseudonym XYZ and its existence was only discovered in 1975. Set in Germany during the years 1934-1939 it is a story about the increasing influence of Nazism and its powerful hold on ordinary people. The Land Is Bright, published in 1946 under the pseudonym Francis Heaton-Chapel, is a novel about an RAF pilot who suffers from panic attacks and branded a coward. In fact many of his novels around that time are set to a backdrop of WWII - Jim Comes Home (1945) and Peggy Windsor and the American Soldier (1946) in particular, and the ones that followed against a backdrop of grim, post-war austerity.
Not all his novels were contemporary. Mutiny, published in 1958, tells the story of the great Spithead Mutiny in the British fleet in 1797, and was adapted for screen. The film H.M.S. Defiant, starring Alec Guinness and Dirk Bogarde, was released in 1962. It was released as Damn the Defiant! in the United States.
Frank Tilsley is also credited with being the writer of the first ‘soap opera’ for television, The Makepeace Story, a saga about a Lancashire cotton family serialised in 1955, and gaining an audience of eight million viewers, a precursor to ‘Coronation Street’. Corrie also owes thanks to Frank Tilsley for giving its creator the name of one of the soap’s more famous families.
He was instrumental in the early days of the BBC, and at the time of his tragically ea
A surprisingly good book. Well-written, period-accurate and - something that I was very surprised about - it didn't really villanize OR deify anyone. The hard-horse first lieutenant had his good sides, the ring leader of the mutiny cracks in the end, the popular captain is weak... Recommended for those who like this sort of stuff.
This is a book of historical fiction. It is a book that evokes the British society of the time of the Napoleonic wars. This book is a history of that time in that it is an examination of the cultural and social attitudes of that time revealed in the interactions between the characters. However, having said that, it is also a gripping adventure tale of naval warfare.
This book wears its history both deeply and lightly. It wears it deeply in that there appears to be real insight into the society of that time. The relations between the social classes, the machinations of politics within the navy etc all are described clearly and informatively. However this is not a book of strung together historical footnotes. The history is revealed naturally in the flow of the interactions between the characters