I swithered with the idea of NOT signing up for the Goodreads Challenge this year, the last two years I signed up to read 100 books and in 2014 I just managed it, but it did mean that I was concentrating on quick reads towards the end of the year, just to get that 100 under my belt. Anyway, I decided to sign up for 75 this year as I do like being able to see at a glance what I’ve read on Goodreads and this should mean that I’ll have more time for classics which tend to be fairly hefty.
So to Not Bad for a Bad Lad by Michael Morpurgo, this book was published in 2010 and is obviously aimed at children but I bought it for the Michael Foreman illustrations, I don’t think I had ever read anything by Morpurgo before.
This is a very quick read, the story is told by a young boy who was born in 1943, one of six children with no father figure around. His mother isn’t able to cope with his bad behaviour which gets worse and worse as he gets older. The upshot is that as a teenager he ends up being sent to a borstal for a year, borstals are now called young offenders institutions.
There are horses at the borstal and he eventually gets a job looking after them and that’s the beginning of a big change in his life. He is trusted to befriend a nervous horse, a Suffolk Punch (like small versions of Clydesdales) called Dombey and the relationship which he builds up with him and the respect which he gets from Mr Alfie, the head of the stables, lead to good behaviour and getting released early from the borstal.
It’s a tale which shows that young people who have lost their way in life can get back on track again if just a few adults like teachers are willing to give them another chance.
There are a few pages and photographs at the end of the story which tell about the history of borstals and horses in the military and also the Suffolk Punch horses which came so close to dying out completely, in fact at the time of publication there were only 410 of them and they are on the critical list of the Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Morpurgo is obviously very fond of animals and horses in particular and he and his wife have set up a charity called Farms for City Children. You can also take a look at the Suffolk Punch Trust if you’re interested. You can see images of Suffolk Punch horses here.
You can see some Michael Foreman illustrations here some of them are from the book.