Some
years after my wife Jen and I moved to Spain, I settled in to writing for magazines and
began selling the occasional novel. Moderate successes. Enough to consider
offering to ghost-write Ron’s story. We began in 2008. It would be
intermittent, this project, because Ron only visited his villa in Spain a
couple times a year, as he still worked (though well over state retirement
age).
So
for roughly two hours per visit, I typed while he dictated his memories. In the
interim, he would jot down reminiscences as they occurred to him back in UK.
Neither he nor Maria were adept at working on the manuscript on the computer,
so there was no interplay or work via email.
I
kept a record of our sessions. There were two in October 2008, two in 2009,
three in 2010, and two in 2011. When I’d finally completed the manuscript, amounting
to some 38,000 words, I sent it to UK for Ron to print off and read through. He
also supplied a number of photographs.
Then
it was time to find a publisher. As Ron was over eighty, we didn’t feel it was
sensible to run the gauntlet of submission and rejection. He wanted to see his
memoire in print. So I loaded it to Amazon’s Createspace and found the entire
process hassle-free.
Where
does the title come from?
Here’s
an excerpt from the section, 'Earlier Ron', which explains the ‘odd shoes’:
School
days were a mixture of pain and joy. I remember being pleased when the River
Trent overflowed and flooded the streets and houses of Branston. I should have
felt sorry for the people, but I guess, but I was too young to make that leap
of empathy. They were in quite a pickle over it even though it was a fairly
regular occurrence.
Of an evening, Gran would say, ‘The
drains outside are gurgling.’ This was her cue to put bread, milk and candles
on the stairs as by morning the whole of the back room and at least two
stair-treads would be under water. I was as pleased as Punch because I thought this meant no school!
Why didn’t I like school? It seemed like all boys and possibly most girls were always glad to get off school. Even so, there were some aspects that I did like, such as the company of my peers and eating the ‘fallers’ – apples in the ditch along the roadside of Homelake. School was filled with the constant embarrassments, the lack of any encouragement at home, the constant feeling of inferiority, I suppose.
Back to the flood. Granddad put on his wellies and carried me on his back to a dry raised part of the street’s pavement. So, after all, I didn’t miss school because of the floods.
Little did I realise those wellies were to be mine one day when my shoes wore out. Gran had tried her best, I suppose. At one time I’d worn odd shoes and attempted blacking the brown one to match. At least Wellingtons were hardwearing. Rain or shine, they were the only footwear I had, even if far too big for me. They rubbed the back of my knees until the skin was red raw. I rolled them up or down to relieve the pain of the chaffing. And holes kept appearing in the heels of my socks so I peeled them under my foot each day and inevitably the socks got shorter and didn’t protect my legs from the walls of the abrasive rubber wellies.
I don’t understand why people have fetishes about rubber; my early memories are just plain horrible.
***
The
medals were presented to him when he served in the Royal Navy, in the section
titled, 'Later Ron'. The concluding part is called Ron the Gas, as his post-naval
career was working with gas appliances, very possibly the oldest qualified gas
fitter in the country.
Odd Shoes and Medals
Ron
Hudson
These
reminiscences cover a span of over seventy years and will jog several memories
and remind people that the so-called poverty of present times is nothing
compared to the 1940s and 1950s.
Young
Ron and his sister Audrey were shunted from one home to another, in excess of a
dozen, ‘fostered’ by ‘aunts’ and ‘uncles’, and indeed for many years the pair of
them didn’t know where the other sibling lived! His absentee father barely gave him a thought
– though he did present him with ill-fitting clogs, once…
Occasionally,
he was shown kindness and, despite moments of great despair, he carried
on and eventually joined the Royal Navy. Ironically, for the first time he found
a place he could call his home: the navy. He travelled the world, saw the
sights, and ‘learned a trade’. When he was demobbed prematurely by politicians,
he embarked on a career in British Gas, and has a few amusing tales to tell
about (nameless) customers! He set up his own business and became the oldest
registered gas fitter in the country, until he retired at age eighty.
As told to Nik Morton
Paperback,
156 pages, 6x9ins
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