Book description
The harrowing true story of one boy's experiences in a brutal
'approved' school for young offenders in '50s London, run by Catholic
monks where violence and abuse were rife.
Beaten from an early age by his abusive, father, John struggled to fit
in at school where his poverty marked him out. When, aged 13, his father
brought a charge against him in order to remove him from the family
home, John found himself in Juvenile Court - from here he was sent to
the notorious St. Vincent's school, run by a group of Catholic Irish Brothers.
Beatings and abuse were a part of daily life - both from John's fellow
pupils, but also from the brothers, all of which was overseen by the
sadistic headmaster, Brother De Montfort. Tormented physically and
sexually by one boy in particular, and by the Brothers in general, John
quickly learnt to survive but at the cost of the loss of his childhood.
Please Don't Make Me Go, tells in heart-rending detail the day-to-day
lives of John and the other boys - the beatings, the weapons fashioned
from toilet chains and stones, the loneliness - but we also see the
development of John's love of reading, his growing friendship with
Father Delaney and his best friend, Bernard, and his unstinting love for
his mother whom he feared was suffering at the hands of his violent father.
A painfully honest account, Please Don't Make Me Go is testament to the
resilience of the human spirit as it documents how John learnt to
survive and come through his ordeal. 'There is only one word to
express my feelings on reading this book and that is: Wow. I was gripped
from beginning to end by a tale that filled me with shock and anger, but
also impressed me deeply with one boy's sheer humanity and guts…The book
has energy, pace and drama.' Helena Drysdale (novelist) Following his
ordeal at St. Vincents school, John Fenton was sent to Ireland by his
father and spent several years in the army before becoming a lorry
driver. He is now retired and is married with three children. He lives
in Cumbria.