Sydney Williams: One Man’s Family –
Growing up in Peterborough & Other Stories
These essays—or as Sydney Williams calls them, “musings”—are evocative
of a time and a place—of growing up in a New Hampshire village in the
late 1940s and early 1950s. Sydney Williams was the second of nine
children whose parents were sculptors and who was
raised on a small farm, with horses, goats and chickens—an
unconventional life in an unconventional place, but during a
conventional time. You’ll read about the Shetland pony that joined the
family’s Christmas celebrations; about impromptu days taken off from
school to ski; about starting a rubber toy business; about learning the
value of charity from an older sister’s founding of a circus and the
value of compassion from a younger brother’s struggle with disabilities.
Throughout the book, Williams ties his personal experiences to events
in the wider world—his father’s return from war on V-J Day; a neighbor’s
reaction to the ban on school prayer; the significance of Memorial Day
celebrations to different generations—and to the events of his later
life, including deaths, births, marital stresses, and school and family
reunions. Williams left Peterborough in 1956 to go off to school, yet
his bonds to Peterborough persist. His brother Willard owns and manages
the Toadstool. Besides Willard, three sisters—Betsy, Charlotte and
Jenny—live nearby. Sydney lives with his wife Caroline in Old Lyme
Connecticut. Free and open to all.
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
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