Heart-breaking and compelling, this is the story of a community in its darkest, and yet finest, hour.As Time Goes By is a vivid portrayal of an East End community struggling to survive the horror of the Blitz, from much-loved author, Harry Bowling. P erfect for fans of Annie Murray and Cathy Sharp.Carter Lane is an ordinary backstreet in Bermondsey and, for Dolly and Mick Flynn, it is home. They've raised their family with not much money but lots of love. When World War Two breaks out, they know that nothing will be quite the same again.As the Blitz starts to take its toll and the close-knit community in Carter Lane endures the sorrows and partings which they had dreaded above all else, they find comfort in one another and solace in the knowledge that their wounds will eventually heal - as time goes by.What readers are saying about As Time Goes By :'I have read all of Harry Bowling's books and have enjoyed every one. This book makes you feel like you know each one of the characters personally . I became so absorbed in their lives I was disappointed that it came to an end''Well done Harry! Yet another cracking book . All the characters are brought to life. You can actually imagine the way everyone lives. I have read all Harry Bowling's books and loved every one! '' Could not put it down - read it in 48 hours'
‘I suppose most people would see the ability to tell a story as a talent to entertain, but where I was born and raised, being able to spin a yarn was considered an asset of survival and, at times, it became a necessity…’ he said.
Harry was born in 1931, in Leroy Street, a back street off the Tower Bridge Road, the second child of Annie and Henry Bowling. His older sister Gladys died of meningitis before her second birthday. Harry’s grandfather worked at a transport yard as a carman-horsekeeper. He used to take Harry there to watch him and to pat the horses. He spent his youth hanging around the Tower Bridge Road market or hunting through Borough Market, a wholesale fruit and veg market near London Bridge, exploring the docklands and wharves, and swimming in the Thames.
Harry’s first contact with books began at the local library encouraged by his father, who was permanently disabled after being wounded during the First World War. Henry Bowling was often unemployed and struggled to support the family. Harry was only ten when the Second World War broke out. He could remember the day when Surrey Docks was bombed. His father helped him with his early education and he and his younger brother passed scholarships to Bermondsey Central School. He left the school at the age of 14 to help the family income by working at a riverside provision merchant as an office boy.
Only when his own children began to ask questions about the war, did Harry realise how many stories he had to tell. He started gathering scribbles and notes and wrote his first book. It was a factual account of the war and Harry realised it would probably have only a limited readership. He became aware that historical fiction was very popular and that there was no one writing about the East End of London, and the war, at that time. In his fifties, he was given early retirement from his job as a brewery driver-drayman, and was at last able to devote his time to writing.
He became known as ‘the King of Cockney sagas’, and he wrote eighteen bestselling novels of London life.
This novel by Harry Bowling, billed as "the king of Cockney sagas," on the back cover, tells about the lives of the residents of a particular working-class street in London during the Blitz. It was a pleasant read but not particularly compelling. I also found the fact that the dialogue was written with an accent (fink instead of think, for example) to be difficult to follow sometimes.
a real good Eastend neighbourhood story Harry Bowling being one of my favourite authors. it makes you wish you could live in such a street! Carter Lane Bermondsey is home to Dolly and Mick Flynn. their boys volunteer for the Armed Forces and to their dismay their daughter insists on throwing her self away on a married man. Their neighbour Liz Kenny is there with advice and a shoulder to cry on. Charity and Cynthia are two elderly sisters who have lived together since Cynthia's husband disappeared. But then a bomb blast uncovers a skeleton at the Leather works which throws confusion all round. The Blitz starts and the people of Carter Lane band together to cope with losses and any good news. Relationships start and end as is life. a really good novel
This is a great book indeed, But with a happy ending and ending seems to be rushing.Author has very well expressed his ideas related to old England, society, the war and how nice the old fellow villagers to each other back in the day.Im hoping to read his other books as well. Finally I could say the author is a great story teller.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Enjoyed the story, history, characters. The written dialogue between characters took a few pages to get used to, as it is written like this, ‘Ann’s favver did a runner wiv a lot o’ cash…’
I liked the characters and context but there was no flow between the different stories and no story arc so some plotlines with a lot of potential instead came across as lackluster.
I liked the idea of this book so much more than the actual book. The elderly Lockwood sisters were absolutely my favourite characters and the love Bowling has for London came through loud and clear, but this didn't make as much of an impact on me as I'd expected.