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This is an omnibus edition, containing one novella and two novels, all of which have already been published. The novella is Billy: The Early Years, which is a prequel to the second book included in this edition, Billy's War, to which the the third title in the collection, There's No Pride in Prejudice, is itself a sequel. It is the story of Billy Frecknall, who is a little boy living in Nottingham, whom we meet in the first book along with his parents in the late 1930s, just before the Second World War broke out. Billy is an intelligent, resourceful, caring little boy, and we are able to see…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This is an omnibus edition, containing one novella and two novels, all of which have already been published. The novella is Billy: The Early Years, which is a prequel to the second book included in this edition, Billy's War, to which the the third title in the collection, There's No Pride in Prejudice, is itself a sequel. It is the story of Billy Frecknall, who is a little boy living in Nottingham, whom we meet in the first book along with his parents in the late 1930s, just before the Second World War broke out. Billy is an intelligent, resourceful, caring little boy, and we are able to see from the early years of his upbringing where his qualities came from: his parents. The first book in the collection takes us up to early 1941, shortly before Billy's War takes up the story. Billy's War starts with an air raid on Nottingham which really happened, and which the author remembers vividly, because he too was living in Nottingham at the time. Billy's mother is killed in the air raid, and, one he comes out of hospital himself, Billy goes to live with his aunt, his father being in the army. Billy is not happy living with his aunt, and he runs away to London, with the object of finding out from the War Office where his father is. The rest of Billy's War is taken up with Billy's adventures. In There's No Pride in Prejudice Billy is now an adult, training to be an opera singer. As we see him ascend the stairway to stardom, we see him in various relationships, notably one with a Jewish girl in Paris and one with a black girl in New York, and he experiences both anti-semitism and racial discrimination; this makes such an impression on him that he devotes his life to fighting prejudice of all kinds.
Autorenporträt
Although he is now 86, Tony Whelpton has written seven novels in the last six years. He has been writing books for nearly forty years, but turned to fiction late in life, and has been so successful that he wishes he had started earlier! He is the author of thirty or so school and college text books - mostly in French- as well as two books on cricket, and a history of the Cheltenham Bach Choir, of which he was elected Vice-President after retiring from singing at the age of 80. He was born in Hyson Green, Nottingham in January 1933, and was educated at St Mary's Junior School, High Pavement Grammar School (where he was taught English by novelist Stanley Middleton, winner of the 1974 Booker Prize), Goldsmiths College (University of London), Birkbeck College (University of London) and the University of Lille. He taught French for four years each at Beckenham & Penge Grammar School and Lowestoft Grammar School, then moved into Higher Education, ultimately becoming Principal Lecturer in French at Trent Polytechnic (later Nottingham Trent University), where he spent 17 years. For more than 25 years he was Chief Examiner in French at O and A Levels and also at GCSE for one of the largest examining boards in the UK. He is also an experienced journalist and broadcaster: he produced and presented the first ever schools programme on UK local radio, a French programme on BBC Radio Nottingham for junior schools, called Écoutez, les enfants! He has sung at the BBC Proms, he came second in the European Final of the World French Spelling Championships in 1990, and appeared on the prestigious television quiz Mastermind on BBC1 in 2009. Tony's attitude to life is that it is there for living and he believes that getting old is not an excuse for sitting around doing nothing; one of his favourite quotations comes from the French cellist Paul Tortelier: 'Everybody should die young - but as late in life as possible'. Now you understand why Tony is still writing!