'I'm going to tell the truth', I said suddenly, 'about what we did and why, and what it did to us.'
'I'm going to tell the truth', I said suddenly, 'about what we did and why, and what it did to us.'
'I m going to tell the truth', I said suddenly, 'about what we did and why, and what it did to us.'
At thirteen Horatio Clare was a boarder at a boy's public school, a privileged member of an apparently blessed generation. A rebel - one of those who detested the system, who thought it not just fun but right to break its laws - he was expelled for smoking dope. He became one of the thousands who gleefully ignored the warnings and set out, in search of experience and intensity, to slalom on the slippery slope.He was a truant in its original sense: one who beggars himself through choice, not necessity. From university campuses to the rooftops of New York; from Brixton basements to fear and loathing in Mid Devon, through psychosis, mania and depression, from sanity to madness and back again, this is a portrait drawn from a generation that turned to drugs. And it is a search for understanding: why do we do these things, and what do they do to us? What were we looking for and what did we find?“Praise for Running for the Hills - : 'A tender, eloquent book about love, the power of the land and the price to paid for living out ones dreams' - Sarah Dunant 'A joy ... heartening, raw, tender.' - John Carey, Sunday Times 'Touching, funny and extremely well-written' - Telegraph Enchanting ... magical ... so beautifully written that you almost hold your breath' - Daily Mail 'A major talent' - Marie Clare Beautifully written crammed with precious details It should be required reading - Guardian It is the prose equivalent of a collection of poems by Ted Hughes or Wordsworth - Sunday Times”
Praise for Running for the Hills - :
'A tender, eloquent book about love, the power of the land and the price to paid for living out ones dreams' - Sarah Dunant'A joy ... heartening, raw, tender.' - John Carey, Sunday Times'Touching, funny and extremely well-written' - TelegraphEnchanting ... magical ... so beautifully written that you almost hold your breath' - Daily Mail'A major talent' - Marie ClareBeautifully written crammed with precious details It should be required reading - GuardianIt is the prose equivalent of a collection of poems by Ted Hughes or Wordsworth - Sunday TimesHoratio Clare has worked on Front Row and Nightwaves, and produced Radio 3's The Verb. Born in 1973, Clare has written for The Spectator, the New Statesman, the Guardian, and the Daily Telegraph.
'I m going to tell the truth', I said suddenly, 'about what we did and why, and what it did to us.' At thirteen Horatio Clare was a boarder at a boy's public school, a privileged member of an apparently blessed generation. A rebel - one of those who detested the system, who thought it not just fun but right to break its laws - he was expelled for smoking dope. He became one of the thousands who gleefully ignored the warnings and set out, in search of experience and intensity, to slalom on the slippery slope.He was a truant in its original sense: one who beggars himself through choice, not necessity. From university campuses to the rooftops of New York; from Brixton basements to fear and loathing in Mid Devon, through psychosis, mania and depression, from sanity to madness and back again, this is a portrait drawn from a generation that turned to drugs. And it is a search for understanding: why do we do these things, and what do they do to us? What were we looking for and what did we find?
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