An edition of Fucking on Fridays (2011)

Fucking on Fridays

My Old Man & the Great Sausage Scam

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March 18, 2011 | History
An edition of Fucking on Fridays (2011)

Fucking on Fridays

My Old Man & the Great Sausage Scam

  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

The author researches the life of his father, Dennis Loraine, to find that he was behind the greatest financial scam in UK history. Dennis then avoided prison by working as a US secret agent to bring to justice those behind an even greater crime.

Publish Date
Publisher
Williams UK

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Fucking on Fridays
Fucking on Fridays: My Old Man & the Great Sausage Scam
11th February 2011, Williams UK

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Book Details


Published in

Worldwide -ebook

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL24619022M
ISBN 13
9781849892940

Excerpts

I always knew that my father was a bastard. He had left home before I was a year old. ‘And that,’ my mother always told me,’ was a great blessing’.

By the time I came to realise that most children had two parents I had a second father. Johannes Kristen had come from Copenhagen with a team of Lipizzaner horses bound for the Blackpool Tower Circus. Soon afterwards he met my mother at a party given by Charlie Cairoli – the most famous clown in the world. They were married when I was five and my mother and I moved to his substantial semi-detached house close to Blackpool’s Stanley Park.

As a circus impresario second father had famous friends. I am told that I was once bought candyfloss and ice cream by Errol Flynn and rewarded him by vomiting on his jacket. I have no recollection of that but I do remember Charlie Cairoli finding a sixpence in his bowler hat which vanished into a handkerchief before reappearing behind my left ear. More than 50 years later I still have that sixpence.

Most of my happiest early memories are of second father. He was a temperate giant who was even better with children than horses. I would ride in the passenger seat of his Lagonda peeping the horn of my own steering wheel which was fixed to the walnut dash by means of a large rubber sucker.

When I thought about first father it was in the sense of ‘disappeared’ or ‘gone away’. There were other children at school without fathers. It seemed to me that ‘missing’ was the much the same as ‘disappeared’. My friend Brian’s Dad had gone ‘missing’ in the jungle of Burma in the final month of the war and a decade later Brian still thought he might turn up.

‘Burma is a long way,’ he explained.
added by Maureen Kristen-Faester.

This is the 'opening scene' of the book.

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March 18, 2011 Edited by Maureen Kristen-Faester Edited without comment.
March 18, 2011 Edited by 95.150.106.66 Added new cover
March 17, 2011 Edited by 95.150.42.56 Edited without comment.
March 17, 2011 Created by 95.150.42.56 Added new book.