What We Are Reading Today: A Very Private School

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Updated 23 March 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: A Very Private School

Author: Charles Spencer

In this poignant memoir, Charles Spencer recounts the trauma of being sent away from home at age eight to attend boarding school.
“A Very Private School” offers a clear-eyed, first-hand account of a culture of cruelty at the school Spencer attended in his youth and provides important insights into an antiquated boarding system.
Drawing on the memories of many of his schoolboy contemporaries, as well as his own letters and diaries from the time, he reflects on the hopelessness and abandonment he felt at aged eight, viscerally describing the intense pain of homesickness and the appalling inescapability of it all.
Exploring the long-lasting impact of his experiences, Spencer presents a candid reckoning with his past and a reclamation of his childhood.
“A Very Private School” centres on Maidwell Hall in Northamptonshire, where Spencer went in the 1970s, between the ages of eight and 13.
Rather, like “Spare,” the tell-all autobiography released last year by Charles’s nephew Harry, this is a posh boy’s misery memoir.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Letter of the Law by Jeanne-Marie Jackson

Updated 07 February 2026
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What We Are Reading Today: The Letter of the Law by Jeanne-Marie Jackson

The African Gold Coast writer and statesman J. E. Casely Hayford (1866–1930) was a key figure in liberal anticolonial thought as well as African and British imperial literary and intellectual history.

In this revisionist account, Jeanne-Marie Jackson positions his career as an intriguing case study of anticolonial literature and politics.

Jackson maps the contours of Casely Hayford’s thought through sustained attention to his written work within its Gold Coast and British imperial contexts, demonstrating the far-reaching conceptual resources of his legal background.