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Best Book Publishers UK | Austin Macauley Publishers

By: Bill Fairbairn

Newsboy

Pages: 284 Ratings: 4.0
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Newsboy or newsgirl (Oxford dictionary)


Boy or girl who delivers or sells newspapers

Bill Fairbairn is editor emeritus, photographer and staff writer for the community newspaper, The Riverview Park Review, in Ottawa, where he lives with his wife, Janina. His full-time newspaper, radio and magazine work since 1943, took in stints in Britain, Africa and Canada. He worked first as a newsboy then full time, at age 15, as apprentice printer and part-time rugby reporter with The Jedburgh Gazette, in the Scottish Borders, near where he was born. After two years of military national service came journalism, consecutively on the Blyth News, the Derby Evening Telegraph, the Sheffield Telegraph, the Sun, the Scotsman, the Vancouver Province, the Williams Lake Tribune, the Montreal Star, Radio Canada International (CBC), the Montreal Gazette, the Ottawa Citizen (part-time), Legion Magazine and The Riverview Park Review.Bill Fairbairn taught journalism for two years at what was then Cariboo College in Kamloops, British Columbia, now University of the North Thompson River, and for a year atevening classes in Ottawa. He spent five years in the 1960s in Africa, working consecutively for The Rhodesia Herald, now located in Harare, Zimbabwe, The Northern News of Ndola in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia) and The Daily Nation in Nairobi, Kenya. From 1953-55, he was a National Service infantry corporal with the King’s Own Scottish Borderers. He was the 2007 Canadian Press Club snooker champion, and in 2008 and 2016, he won the age 55 and over snooker championship at the Orange Monkey salon in Ottawa.
Customer Reviews
4.0
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  • Qais Ghanem

    Newsboy – a book review. Bill Fairbairn’s Newsboy grabbed my attention from the first page of the first chapter, because it mentioned his Scottish home town of Hawick, where lives my closest medical student friend from our University of Edinburgh class of 64, and where I have visited many a time. On that same page, I learnt for the first time, the Scottish origin of the expression “the real McCoy”. And throughout this interesting 280 page book, I kept learning so much about the many different nations among whom the author lived, be it in Africa, Europe, or North America, and the varied experiences of the author in those near and faraway places, from learning Pitman’s shorthand, to soldiering with the King’s Own Scottish Borderers, to writing for The Scotsman and the Edinburgh Evening News, both of which I read voraciously in years gone by. Later he worked for the Sheffield Telegraph, voted Best English Provincial Newspaper in 1960. The middle part of the book is mainly about Africa, where he spent many years and where he has a lot to say about the big-league political players such as Ian Smith, Jomo Kenyatta, Julius Nyerere, Hastings Banda, Kenneth Kaunda, Joshua Nkomo, Robert Mugabe, Moise Tshombe, Milton Obote, Idi Amin, Patrice Lumumba, and of course, that special hero, Nelson Mandela. But, since he chose to move to Canada, Fairbairn also tells us about Louis Riel, and the role of Canadian leaders such as Sir John A. MacDonald, in the history of this, his adopted country. In the final chapters of his book, describing his later years of life, Fairbairn also wrote about Canadian politics and social issues, which sound somewhat mundane, only if compared with the chaotic upheavals of Africa. As I read through this 280-page book, it became evident that all those inter-continental travels must have somehow frustrated any romantic relationships he might have attempted to develop. I felt sorry for this warm, kind hearted Scotsman. But then Janina came along, and there is a happy ending, at last! Qais Ghanem, Canada Author of: Democracy Deity and Death. (publishers Austin Macauley, London) And 4 other novels.

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