Review of Reg Bennett's book Billy the Kid (A Year in the Life of), by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 10th April 2006, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
BILLY THE KID
(A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF)
Depending on your age, and especially if you were once a lad, you are
bound to find a soft spot for our hero, bright little Billy Nobstick. Fictional
he may be, but with his boyhood adventures taking place in 1938, he
could just as easily be your grandad, your dad, or someone even closer
to home.
Author Reg Bennett has published almost thirty Western novels but
this story has been ticking over in his mind for many years, just waiting
its turn. This Billy the Kid and his sidekicks live not in the Wild West but
in Burbage, which really does exist and which will have been plagued by
lads just like these scruffy ruffians. Their pleasures are their loyal gang,
dog-end Woodbines, the gloriously named Jerusalem Cuckoo, and
making mischief. Their pains are short trousers and scabby knees, soap
and water, insolvency, boils, and giggling girls.
There is no pocket money unless it is earned, in Billy's case running
errands, shovelling coal, and his daily paper round. He also has to
collect the Manchester evening papers which arrive at Buxton station by
steam train, adding yet more nostalgia to escapades set against
background detail of street gas lamps, orange-box furniture, peg rugs,
outside toilets, cobbled gutters, marrowbone broth and hob-nailed boots.
This year in the life of Billy the Kid should stir many happy memories.
The ten chapters are delightfully illustrated by Peter Revell who, like the
author, comes from Buxton. Published by
Ashridge Press/Country Books
the title is on sale in most local bookshops, priced £7.95. (To order quote
ISBN 1-90124-58-3).