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OverviewThe medical consultant of Oxford University’s Bodleian Library told Don Chapman to strip off, took one look at him and demanded: ‘Young man, how do you expect to get through life with a body like that?’ Seventy years later he is still trying. In this, his latest book, a tongue-in-cheek memoir called ‘A Tenpenny Dip in Paradise and other flights of fancy’, Don draws on some of the wackier articles he wrote during forty years in journalism to explore the excitements, fascinations and absurdities of the twentieth century and dip a wary toe into the turbulent waters of the twenty-first. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Don ChapmanPublisher: The Conrad Press Imprint: The Conrad Press Dimensions: Width: 12.90cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 19.80cm ISBN: 9781914913860ISBN 10: 1914913868 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 22 July 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface 9 1 - Growing up 12 2 - University 38 3 - Trainee journalist: Keighley 43 4 - Trainee journalist: Swindon 57 5 - The move to Oxford 68 6 - Personal Columns 79 7 - I meet my wife 93 8 - A change of editor 99 9 - Alias Anthony Wood 139 10 - John Owen and me 165 11 - A busy life 169 12 - Moving down market 193 13 - Senior feature writer and arts editor 223 14 - Personal problems 241 15 - Pursued by parrots 256 16 - Retirement plus 292 Acknowledgements 308ReviewsAuthor InformationDon was born and educated in Oxford. In 1956 he became a graduate trainee with the Westminster Press. He spent most of his working life at the ‘Oxford Mail and Times’ as reporter, columnist, theatre critic, feature writer and arts editor. Since he retired he has written ‘Oxford Playhouse: High and low drama in a university city’, for which he gained a doctorate from Leicester University, and the widely acclaimed analysis of rational dress, ‘Wearing the Trousers: Fashion, Freedom and the Rise of the Modern Woman’. Don Chapman has lived for the last fifty-two years in Eynsham, seven miles upstream from where he spent the first two years of his life, overlooking the Thames at Folly Bridge. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |