7th February, 2014 / 11.00am - 4.00pm
14th November, 2022
The author, Richard Keagan-Bull, is employed as a researcher at Kingston University. He has learning disabilities. He struggles to read and write, but he has dictated his life story to his friend-turned-secretary Hazel Bradley. It is written exactly as he speaks – not necessarily grammatically correct, but with a unique directness and power.
This book is a unique, honest and powerful account of what it is like to grow up with learning disabilities in the UK.
Richard tells the story of growing up in 1970s England and living through the decades where people with learning disabilities were increasingly given a voice. It is a story of finding your place in a world that is not always welcoming, but also of finding friends. Starting with his birth when his mother was told he would never do anything, and his early years, when he was rubbished by the headmaster who threw his schoolwork out of the window, he ends his book almost half a century later, when the boy who would never do anything landed a job at the university as a researcher.
Richard writes about serious subjects with a very light touch. It will be of interest to anyone who wishes to gain an extremely rare insight into the life of a person with learning disabilities, in a voice that is so completely his own.
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