Description
A revealing, honest and often comic coming-of-age story about growing up in 1970s Britain on the boundaries of race‘Full of charm’ GUARDIAN‘An account of what being British means’ i‘Captures a country in transition … You can’t fail to be moved’ THE TIMESKamal Ahmed’s childhood was very ‘British’ in every way – except for the fact that he was brown. Half English, half Sudanese, he was raised at a time when being mixed-race meant being told to go home, even when you were born just down the road.This is his account of an upbringing of cricket and bucket-and-spade holidays, Angel Delight and the BBC – British to the core, yet always feeling foreign in the only home he had ever known. ‘Ahmed grew up as a mixed-race kid in west London in the seventies, and his book charts the progress (sometimes slow and now without a few setbacks along the way) that our country has made on race issues since then. Brilliant’ Rohan Silva, Evening Standard