A Glass Darkly
A wartime love story. A conscientious objector. Two disasters. A boy left alone.
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5.0 • 4 Ratings
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- £2.99
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
What happens when the foundations of a childhood are quietly removed—and the questions are never answered?
In A Glass Darkly, Nick Evans offers a deeply moving and reflective memoir about growing up in the long shadow of loss. When his father dies suddenly in a motorcycle accident and his mother follows only a few years later, Evans is left to navigate childhood, identity, and adulthood without the emotional tools to understand what has been taken from him—or why its absence continues to shape his life.
Part detective story, part family history, and part psychological reckoning, this memoir traces a lifelong search for meaning. Evans returns to post-war Britain, Methodist communities in Yorkshire and Wales, and the intimate domestic worlds of his parents and grandparents, reconstructing a life interrupted. Along the way, he uncovers wartime diaries, explores ancestral roots, and confronts the quiet, unspoken grief that has informed his relationships, anxieties, and sense of self.
Written with honesty, warmth, and a distinctly British eye for detail, A Glass Darkly is not simply a story of bereavement, but of resilience and understanding. It is a thoughtful meditation on how childhood trauma echoes across decades—and how, even later in life, it is possible to find peace, clarity, and compassion for the people we once were.
This memoir will resonate deeply with readers who value reflective life writing, emotional truth, and the subtle interplay between memory, history, and identity.
Customer Reviews
Coming to terms with childhood tragedy
Loved the very British feel to these memories. It spoke to me about the loneliness of an only child, and being an orphan. The past really does feel like another country and the child is definitely the father of the man.
Those of us of similar age were often educated by people who were adults before the second world war and they wanted to produce stoic, dutiful and resilient citizens.
Sometimes they were brutal and believed that children brought up in a loving environment needed ‘toughening up’ and ‘rough’ children needed punishment. The ‘sink or swim’ approach tended to isolate children who couldn’t always cope.
Wonderful read
A profound look back at how grief can affect life and accessing the past can move you forward. With a fantastic love story embedded, what a discovery. Thank you Nick