Boyhood Heroes

If you have a life outside of BWFC, then this is the place to tell us all about your toilet habits, and those bizarre fetishes.......

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Gooner Girl
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Gooner Girl » Wed Jun 18, 2014 6:38 pm

Gary the Enfield wrote:
LeverEnd wrote:I was a big fan of Hal and Roger Hunt in the Willard Price Adventure series. Great kids books. Probably banned for political incorrectness of some sort I'd imagine.
I read those too. Gained most of my early zoological knowledge from these 'adventure' series. They collected animals for their fathers zoo on Long Island if I recall?
Also enjoyed the Willard Price books. Jennings was a favourite as well, and loved anything by Enid Blyton. Enjoyed Biggles in my teenage years (also enjoyed having a good excuse to go into the bloke I fancied's bedroom and borrow from his vast collection ;)) but as a right little rough, tough, tree climbing tomboy I mostly wanted to be Just William. 8)

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by LeverEnd » Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:19 pm

Dan, kids are no more or less imaginative than they have ever been. I've had genuinely interesting chats with kids that I teach, often 'geeky' ones who have honed their imaginations through the fantasy worlds they visit in computer games. They are fascinated and inspired by these things and one of the pleasures of being a teacher is talking to a kid who is really passionate about something, whatever it is.
Some of the school sports stars I've met (who are always out playing games and sports) have been the least imaginative. One has nothing to do with the other. Far from all kids are like this of course, but there are many out there. You just haven't met them.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Burnden Paddock » Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:21 pm

Kids don't read, eh? Two words. Harry Potter!

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by TANGODANCER » Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:38 pm

My daughters were kids in the seventies/eighties so I can't remember exactly what they read. Enid Blyton is ageless, Beatrix Potter, Bridge to Terrabithia and The Weirdstone of Brisingamen come to mind as remembered reading along with old favourites like Anne of Green Gables, Black Beauty, Follyfoot and all the Girls Own thingumies. They, like most young kids, loved stories.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Gooner Girl » Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:49 pm

^ if my two kids had their way I would read books to them all day. They love them and we have loads, probably far too many (can you have too many books?) They always have a bedtime story every night and we usually (time allowing) get through several more during the day. On Tuesday afternoons when they go to my mums whilst I'm at work I think she pretty much usually sits and reads to them non stop for about 2 hours :shock: ( the sucker that she is!)

I can recite pretty much all 20 of the 'Farmyard Tales' books. 8)

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Lord Kangana » Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:58 pm

I read loads of books. I own f*cking thousands.

Fat lot of good its done me. I should have stuck to video games, if you ask me.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Montreal Wanderer » Wed Jun 18, 2014 11:41 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:I read loads of books. I own f*cking thousands.

Fat lot of good its done me. I should have stuck to video games, if you ask me.
I read all the time and have many thousands - have thrown out thousands too for space reasons. However, my daughter gave me an old ebook reader so I have stopped buying books. It is loaded with, inter alia, a lot of old books I read 50-60 years ago in my parents house. These include (you will be pleased to hear, Tango) all of Sapper's Bulldpg Drummond books and A.E.W. Mason's stuff including the Four Feathers. I am currently re-reading Dumas' Musketeer trilogy.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Burnden Paddock » Wed Jun 18, 2014 11:45 pm

My first 'hero' as I recall, was Casey Jones. I really, really wanted to drive a train. :(

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by TANGODANCER » Wed Jun 18, 2014 11:58 pm

Montreal Wanderer wrote: These include (you will be pleased to hear, Tango) all of Sapper's Bulldpg Drummond books and A.E.W. Mason's stuff including the Four Feathers. I am currently re-reading Dumas' Musketeer trilogy.
And I hope ( I know you'll have Hammond Innes and Alaister McLean, Dennis Wheatley etc) P.C Wren's Beau Geste, Ryder Haggard, G.K.Chesterton, Edgar Rice Buroughs, Conan Doyle, Sir Walter Scott etc, etc.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Montreal Wanderer » Thu Jun 19, 2014 4:40 am

TANGODANCER wrote:
Montreal Wanderer wrote: These include (you will be pleased to hear, Tango) all of Sapper's Bulldpg Drummond books and A.E.W. Mason's stuff including the Four Feathers. I am currently re-reading Dumas' Musketeer trilogy.
And I hope ( I know you'll have Hammond Innes and Alaister McLean, Dennis Wheatley etc) P.C Wren's Beau Geste, Ryder Haggard, G.K.Chesterton, Edgar Rice Buroughs, Conan Doyle, Sir Walter Scott etc, etc.
I have all of Innes and McLlean in hardcopy along with Scott's complete works, along with much of Buroughs, Wheatley, Haggard and Conan Doyle. Oddly enough I have Chesterton's poems but only a book or two of his short Father Brown stories.
All the missing Haggard, Doyle and Buroughs are on the e-reader, along with some R.L Stevenson. I have seen the movie Beau Geste, but have never owned or read the book. I'll look for it in epub format.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by CrazyHorse » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:00 am

Montreal Wanderer wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:I read loads of books. I own f*cking thousands.

Fat lot of good its done me. I should have stuck to video games, if you ask me.
I read all the time and have many thousands - have thrown out thousands too for space reasons. However, my daughter gave me an old ebook reader so I have stopped buying books. It is loaded with, inter alia, a lot of old books I read 50-60 years ago in my parents house. These include (you will be pleased to hear, Tango) all of Sapper's Bulldpg Drummond books and A.E.W. Mason's stuff including the Four Feathers. I am currently re-reading Dumas' Musketeer trilogy.
Yeah well I can't read. Or write.
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by jaffka » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:04 am

When we were playing football and all arguing over which player we were being, the names glen hoddle, Trevor Francis, Trevor brooking and platini would come up.

When it was rugby, everyone wanted to be Des Drummond. :oyea:

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Bruce Rioja » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:17 am

jaffka wrote:When we were playing football and all arguing over which player we were being, the names glen hoddle, Trevor Francis, Trevor brooking and platini would come up.

When it was rugby, everyone wanted to be Des Drummond. :oyea:

Haha :lol:

I always bagsied being Asa Hartford for some reason. My younger brother, who struggled with the concept, always used to bagsy being West Germany. :?
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by jaffka » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:20 am

I missed out Kev keegan there.

Notice no scousers or manure. Proper upbringing as at gage time Liverpool were the main constant best team and Bryan robson wasn't as injury prone.

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Worthy4England » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:36 am

jaffka wrote:When we were playing football and all arguing over which player we were being, the names glen hoddle, Trevor Francis, Trevor brooking and platini would come up.

When it was rugby, everyone wanted to be Des Drummond. :oyea:
Jarzinho for me.

Oh and Tony Neary for the rugger. Until the bastard concussed me.

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by thebish » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:47 am

Burnden Paddock wrote:My first 'hero' as I recall, was Casey Jones. I really, really wanted to drive a train. :(
Casey Jones
Steamin' and rollin'
Casey Jones
You never have to guess
When you hear the tootin' of the whistle
It's Casey at the throttle of the Cannonball Express


awwwwww yes!

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Gary the Enfield » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:49 am

thebish wrote:
Burnden Paddock wrote:My first 'hero' as I recall, was Casey Jones. I really, really wanted to drive a train. :(
Casey Jones
Steamin' and rollin'
Casey Jones
You never have to guess
When you hear the tootin' of the whistle
It's Casey at the throttle of the Cannonball Express


awwwwww yes!

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by Bruce Rioja » Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:52 am

thebish wrote:
Burnden Paddock wrote:My first 'hero' as I recall, was Casey Jones. I really, really wanted to drive a train. :(
Casey Jones
Steamin' and rollin'
Casey Jones
You never have to guess
When you hear the tootin' of the whistle
It's Casey at the throttle of the Cannonball Express


awwwwww yes!
There was a boy at our school called Kevin Jones who we used sing that to, only replacing Casey with Kevin, obviously. Oh how we laughed at our own jokes back then. Still do. :D
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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by jaffka » Thu Jun 19, 2014 11:08 am

Worthy4England wrote:
jaffka wrote:When we were playing football and all arguing over which player we were being, the names glen hoddle, Trevor Francis, Trevor brooking and platini would come up.

When it was rugby, everyone wanted to be Des Drummond. :oyea:
Jarzinho for me.

Oh and Tony Neary for the rugger. Until the bastard concussed me.
That should be a claim to fame.

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Re: Boyhood Heroes

Post by TANGODANCER » Thu Jun 19, 2014 4:54 pm

Wilson. The greatest fiction hero of them all. He once broke the world long jump record with a bloke on his back. Unfortunately there were no officials there to see it. :lol:

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