Praise for the previous edition:
This is a biography written in blood, love and tears in the tradition of Gosses Father and Son. Philip Howard, The Times.
Have you ever wondered how even the most dedicated anti-Semite could stay an unashamed Jew-baiter once the 1946 newsreel footage of the concentration camps, with their corpses piled up like firewood, had been seen. Trevor Grundys touchingly honest memoir goes some way towards answering that question. Maurice Gran, FT.
In Trevor Grundys household Oswald Mosley was a god and anti-Semitism a religion. Fifty years on, he tells how he escaped his hateful upbringing and how he discovered his mothers terrible secret. Murray Armstrong, The Guardian.
Trevor Grundys childhood autobiography is a chilling confession which is bound to cause ripples. It reminds us how the corrosive influence of fascism dripped through British society from the House of Windsor to the proletariat. Julia Pascal, The Independent.
Young Grundy was fed on a diet of anti-Semitism, race hatred and the belief that all would be well when Mosley became Britains leader. Grundy describes his early years and escape from the shackles of Mosleys Union Movement (the racist party he founded in 1948) with insight and humour. The surprise is that he can write about this with sanity and honesty. Stephen Boyd, The Sunday Times.
With both parents now dead, Trevor Grundy has at last been able to let in the light. He has written a remarkable book, an understated very English example of how evil and corruption in a family and a political movement were finally defeated by decency and truth. Anne Chisholm, Times Literary Supplement.
Memoir of a Fascist Childhood is a salutary reminder that ordinary people star-struck women, spellbound children were affected by what, for Mosleys languid friends, often seemed like an upper-class game. Ben Pimlott, The Guardian.
Trevor Grundy was once a bright young hope of British Fascism. At the age of 17, he spoke at a meeting in Trafalgar Square on behalf of the Fascist movement and its leader Sir Oswald Mosley. How he got into this predicament, and then how he escaped, is an extraordinary story, revealing and pitiful at the same time. David Pryce-Jones, The Evening Standard.
The very fact of his being able to write so dispassionately and so well about such strange beginnings is a kind of victory for the human spirit. Robert Hanks, The Independent on Sunday.
This book is compelling and moving. You can get books that tell you more facts about fascism. But nothing else offers the colour and texture of the times and the people. Francis Beckett, New Statesman.
Trevor Grundys survival is remarkable. And his book is salutary, because it is often funny and tells effectively of Fascism as farce. Accounts solely of gruesomeness have been told often enough and can encourage what they aim to defeat. Nicholas Mosley, Daily Telegraph.
It is as if someone brought up in the asylum eventually got over the wall to bring the world tales of lifelong derangements, dangerous obsessions, malevolent stupidities and the crippled soul of permanently damaged inmates. Grundys account of this is simply written but is clearly propelled by anger at a life so distorted. His journalistic skills are employed to great effect to produce a crisp, no-frills memoir of shocking intensity. David Nathan, Jewish Chronicle.