This highly autobiographical novel, set in 1957, sees Ted Lewis turn away from the gritty, violent crime novels he is best known for. Reading it in 2025 it immediately has the ability to shock one's sensibilities as modern day attitudes would find fault with a way of life which was commonplace in the late 1950s.
All the characters are clearly drawn from real life and every location existed and were places the author knew well. Elsham Chalk Quarry where much of the action takes place, including one of the book's most violently repulsive scenes was run by the author's father. Although Ted Lewis has reinvented himself as Victor he is still the gaffer's son and still trying to pursue a career as an artist despite ridicule from many of his associates.
I have great empathy for all the characters and think this novel is hugely important in recording a tiny section of social history. This is Ted Lewis being frank about his own past.