Genre: Memoir
Approximate word count: 45-50,000 words
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Author:
A native of
Glasgow who later moved to England,
Reilly served two years in the Royal Air Force and then went to work as a
salesman, the period described in this memoir. Later in life he worked in the
textile trade, for Social Services, and as a hotel owner, before retiring. He
and his wife have five children, thirteen grandchildren, and four
great-grandchildren.
Description:
“An account
of one young collector/salesman’s exploits and adventures selling goods on
credit door to door in the poorer areas of Glasgow in the 50s and 60s.”
Appraisal:
Before
almost everyone had a credit card (or three), there apparently existed an
alternative for someone strapped for cash to get that new TV or “radiogram.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiogram_(furniture)
(I wasn’t familiar with the term
radiogram. It was used in the UK to describe a small piece of furniture that
combined a radio and a record player – not unlike a smaller version of the
console stereos popular in the US in the 1950s.) If you couldn’t buy that
radiogram outright, there were companies (the author worked for several) that
had door to door salesmen who would sell you many products on credit. After
making the sale, the salesman would visit each week to collect your payment in
person. If you kept up with your payments he would, of course, try to sell you
something else as your initial debt was getting paid down.
I found Can You Come Back Next Week? to be an
interesting look at a time and place that is foreign to me and a practice I
didn’t realize existed. Possibly this practice existed in the US at that time –
door to door salesmen of various stripes were certainly much more prevalent
–but if it did, it isn’t something of which I was aware.
Imagine
your grandfather (or even great-grandfather) sitting in the recliner telling
you a series of stories about his work life forty or fifty years ago and you’ll
have a reasonable idea of what to expect from Can You Come Back Next Week? It has more polish than your grandfather’s
stories probably would and there is a good chance Reilly is a better
storyteller. Reilly avoids going off on an unrelated tangent in the middle of a
story, something Grandpa almost certainly would, but the chronology of
everything that happened is going to be unclear, although not important to
understanding.
I did have
one problem with Can You Come Back Next
Week?, and it was a big one for me. This was one of word choice, using
slang and words that are non-standard, at least to a North American. I’ve read
many books by authors from all over the world using every imaginable flavor of
English, and normally don’t have problems understanding what is being said
through a combination of context, experience, and occasional reference to my
trusty Kindle dictionary. That didn’t work nearly as well as normal. Sometimes
a word was explained, although not always before it had already been used several times.
FYI:
Uses UK
spelling conventions and slang.
Format/Typo Issues:
A small
number of typos and copy editing issues.
Rating: *** Three stars
1 comment:
For anyone considering purchasing this book, it has been republished on Amazon since it was submitted for review here. The new URL is: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008DY1SAG
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