Seminary Boy: A Memoir
John Cornwell, . . Doubleday, $24.95 (321pp) ISBN 978-0-385-51486-6
By age 11, Cornwell had a well-deserved reputation as "an academic reject and troublemaker." Besides running with young thugs in London's East End, he had attacked a nun, a teacher at his school. But after a stranger molested him, he became a devout altar boy and, two years later, a priest-in-training at Cotton College. There he lost his Cockney accent, felt schoolboy crushes and constantly wrestled with an overzealous conscience, his scruples exacerbated by priest-teachers ranging from rigid to predatory. Helping him navigate stormy adolescence was the brilliant and sensible Father Armishaw, literature teacher and music lover, who cared for him as his own troubled father and volatile mother were never able to do. Readers who objected to Cornwell's controversial bestseller
Reviewed on: 04/10/2006
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 225 pages - 978-0-385-51853-6
Paperback - 334 pages - 978-0-385-51487-3