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Biography & Memoir

Being a Boy by Paxton Davis

Being a Boy
Paxton Davis

John F. Blair, Publisher
978-0-89587-168-8
$8.95 paperback
5 x 7
253 pages
Published in 1988
Bio/Memoir

In the hazy days before television and adult-supervised athletics, boys had to create their own amusements. In the 1930s, Paxton Davis and the boys from his neighborhood wreaked a brand of youthful havoc that was at once innocent, innovative, idyllic, and uniquely American.

Baseball was "as natural as breathing," played with towsacks or bushes for bases, splintered bats held together with electric tape, and teams with from two to two dozen players. The Meketchum Detective Agency was founded for the express purpose of apprehending John Dillinger, Public Enemy No. 1. Davis's Boy Scout Troop "never became a notable example of Scouting endeavor," but "it gained a widespread reputation as the troop freest of ambition and most devoted to pleasure."

In more traditional fashion, Davis and his friends listened to radio serials, delivered newspapers, attended summer camp, and, with a measure of trepidation, danced with the girls at the local female academy.

Davis recalls his youth with grace, humor, and a balanced perspective. Times and circumstances change, but there is always something to be celebrated in a boyhood fondly remembered.

Reviews

“A delicate portrait of a vanished age.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“Modestly titled, this charming memoir of an almost idyllic boyhood in Winston-Salem, N.C., in the 1920s and '30s is captivating. Columnist for the Roanoke Times and World-News Davis writes of a "sweet, safe, innocent America" when, relatively untouched by the Depression, the sons of upper-middle-class families played baseball and football unhampered by the strictures of Little League or Pop Warner League and lived for their Saturday-afternoon visits to the movies to watch their cowboy heroes. There were other diversions as well, including Davis's attempts to set up a detective agency to capture John Dillinger, joining a Boy Scout troop better known for its spirit of fun than for winning merit badges and attending summer camp. And then there were the less attractive features of life, like memorizing a catechism and going to dances at the local female academy. Anyone over 60 will love the memoir.”
—Publishers Weekly

Links

Also by Paxton Davis:
A Boy No More
A Boy’s War