The Boy with the Topknot: A Memoir of Love, Secrets and Lies
Synopsis
Now a major new BBC drama
It's 1979, I'm three years old, and like all breakfast times during my youth it begins with Mum combing my hair, a ritual for which I have to sit down on the second-hand, floral-patterned settee, and lean forward, like I'm presenting myself for execution.
The Boy with the Topknot: A Memoir of Love, Secrets and Lies is a hilarious and heart-rending reinvention of the modern British memoir.
For Sathnam Sanghera, growing up in Wolverhampton in the eighties was a confusing business. On the one hand, these were the heady days of George Michael mix-tapes, Dallas on TV and, if he was lucky, the occasional Bounty Bar. On the other, there was his wardrobe of tartan smocks, his 30p-an-hour job at the local sewing factory and the ongoing challenge of how to tie the perfect top-knot.
And then there was his family, whose strange and often difficult behaviour he took for granted until, at the age of twenty-four, Sathnam made a discovery that changed everything he ever thought he knew about them.
Equipped with breathtaking courage and a glorious sense of humour, he embarks on a journey into their extraordinary past - from his father's harsh life in rural Punjab to the steps of the Wolverhampton Tourist Office - trying to make sense of a life lived among secrets.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
- ISBN: 9780141028590
- Number of pages: 336
- Dimensions: 199 x 131 x 22 mm
- Weight: 230g
- Languages: English




















