Stirling Observer

‘One of the most important histories of Stirling for our times’

- Elspeth King

This is the childhood memoir of writer, teacher and historian Peter Paterson, who died last week.

Published in 1998, it is one of the most important histories of Stirling for our times.

It is a remembranc­e of things past and a detailed account of growing up in Cambusbarr­on in the 1950s.

It is lyrical and written with style, love and fluency, but without sentimenta­l nostalgia.

The“elephant in the sky”was a large helium balloon flown above Billy Smart’s Circus when it visited King’s Park and seen from all over Stirling.

For Peter Paterson, it symbolised the magic of his childhood where the sandstone blocks of Cambusbarr­on Primary School seemed to have been fashioned by the Israelites under the supervisio­n of Moses and even the local cowp contained a world of exploratio­n.

So much of his narrative is the common experience of a 1950s Scottish childhood - the family paying £27.10s for a set of encyclopae­dias over three years but giving the Beano Book 1954 at Christmas 1958; hiding under the table when the rent man called; a war-wounded uncle bedded in the sitting room.

The richness of the descriptio­n validates the lives of so many others that the book should be a Scottish classic.

The cover illustrati­on is by George Waller, former Principal Teacher of Art at St Modan’s High School where Peter taught.

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