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A Young Lady's Miscellany

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Auriel Roe's memoir is honest, warm and really, really funny with moments that will remain with me long after reading it

I loved this book. It might have been the nostalgia for my own childhood that has tempered my view of it or the very Britishness of it but Auriel Roe's memoir is a read that will stay with me long after I have finished it.


The book is the author's recollections from her own life, starting with her very different grandmothers, and growing up in northern England, through her school years, college days, boyfriends, first jobs and finally, to motherhood. It is an amalgamation of experiences and musings which have been grouped in a similar manner to a book that she found at her grandmother's house called A Young Lady's Miscellany.


Auriel Roe's younger life, as is to be expected, was shaped somewhat by her family and the relationships that she has with members of it. Her discussion of her grandmothers, especially Manda is full of warm remembrances and humorous stories as well as contemplation of how she has been influenced by them. However, there is also regret at how she could have gained more from them, especially with her maternal grandmother, May. Her father has importance too but not necessarily positive and there is a sense of disappointment in the way that he conducted himself throughout the book.


I think what I liked most was the candid nature in which it was related. Roe has a dry wit which permeates the retelling of her life's experiences and had me laughing out loud. There is one story in particular of her time in school in Caerleon, Wales which, even after finishing it, when remembered, makes me chuckle to myself and probably will far into the future.


In some respects, as lives go, Roe's is not particularly remarkable. There are no lurid stories really, just the normal rites of passage and milestones which chart the progression from child to adult: finding out who you are in terms of your role models; making friends at school; interest in the opposite sex and the world that opens up as a result; deciding what you want to do with your life or not, as the case may be; lovers; employment; and children. But its frank examination is what makes it stand out.


This book's strength lies in its candour and its humour and I cannot express enough how much I enjoyed it nor how the line "They're chucking Oscar!" will never fail to make me smile.

Reviewed by

It's not easy to sum up who I am, enough to make me interesting anyway, so what's essential to know? I love to read. I love to review. I love to write and blog at scuffedgranny.com. Short stories and poems are my main writing successes, winning runner-up plaudits on Reedsy Prompts and Vocal.media.

Of Grandmothers and Girlhood

About the author

Auriel spent the earlier part of her career teaching in secondary schools in the UK and abroad. Her debut novel 'Blindefellows' was #1 in humour in Amazon US, Canada and UK. Auriel is the 4th cousin of Margaret Atwood and a direct descendant of Pendal "witch" Alice Nutter. view profile

Published on June 30, 2021

Published by Dogberry Books

80000 words

Genre: Biographies & Memoirs

Reviewed by