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  • Published: 28 November 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241671740
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00

Eight Weeks

Looking Back, Moving Forwards, Defying the Odds





A deeply moving and inspiring memoir that tells the remarkable life story of Baroness Young of Hornsey, from her childhood in foster care, to becoming one of the first Black Women in the House of Lords.

Lola Young has been an actress, an academic, an activist and a crossbench peer. But from the age of eight weeks to eighteen years, she was moved between countless foster care placements and children's homes. It would take many decades before she was able to make sense of her childhood.

In her poignant and inspiring memoir, she pieces together her own remarkable life story, using fragments of memory, her care records, and her imagination where parts of her story are missing. As she revisits her childhood in north London, she also provides glimpses into her life as a peer, activist, and campaigner - and tells the story of her attempts to reconnect with her roots in later adulthood.


Baroness Young's story is a vital part of contemporary Black British history, but is also a moving account of being a child in care, a black child in a white family, and the sense of disconnection that comes from living between cultures.

  • Published: 28 November 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241671740
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00

Praise for Eight Weeks

I love Eight Weeks ... Baroness Lola Young reveals how a child is constantly wronged by a system which was supposed to help ... In Eight Weeks Lola befriends her childhood self. She holds her by the hand as they enter the storm of a system raging around her. I am in awe of the woman who grew from the child in this book ... The pure character necessary to grow through this dark entangled forest of childhood is the stuff of legends. Bravissima Lola

Lemn Sissay, author of My Name is Why

I love Eight Weeks ... Baroness Lola Young reveals how a child is constantly wronged by a system which was supposed to help ... In Eight Weeks Lola befriends her childhood self. She holds her by the hand as they enter the storm of a system raging around her. I am in awe of the woman who grew from the child in this book ... The pure character necessary to grow through this dark entangled forest of childhood is the stuff of legends. Bravissima Lola

Lemn Sissay, author of My Name is Why

A remarkable account of rejection, resilience and resolve. Lola has unashamedly let us into the vulnerability that came with her surpassing expectations and perfectly portrays the essential human need to belong

Michelle Gayle

A remarkable account of rejection, resilience and resolve. Lola has unashamedly let us into the vulnerability that came with her surpassing expectations and perfectly portrays the essential human need to belong

Michelle Gayle

A remarkable book: at once beautiful and harrowing, deeply unsettling and profoundly life-affirming. It is, quite simply, the best memoir that I’ve read on 50s Britain

John Akomfrah

A remarkable book: at once beautiful and harrowing, deeply unsettling and profoundly life-affirming. It is, quite simply, the best memoir that I’ve read on 50s Britain

John Akomfrah

A superb, moving memoir of a fraught childhood forging a great human spirit. Inspirational!

Helena Kennedy LT KC

A superb, moving memoir of a fraught childhood forging a great human spirit. Inspirational!

Helena Kennedy LT KC

Lola Young takes us on a remarkable journey, both personal and political, that few have travelled but all can relate to. An inspiring story from an inspirational storyteller.

Gary Younge

Lola Young takes us on a remarkable journey, both personal and political, that few have travelled but all can relate to. An inspiring story from an inspirational storyteller.

Gary Younge

This is a remarkable story about a remarkable woman. An eight-week old baby effectively abandoned by her Nigerian parents, raised in foster care and a series of children’s homes, endures loss, loneliness, racism, trauma and depression to become a peer of the realm. It is a hopeful and uplifting story about resilience and self-reliance, simultaneously a memoir and a book about memory: some memories being vague and incomplete, others told in graphic, almost cinematic detail. We may be explained in some sense by our memories, but Baroness Lola Young has valiantly and brilliantly shown that we need not be defined by them.

Hugh Quarshie

This is a remarkable story about a remarkable woman. An eight-week old baby effectively abandoned by her Nigerian parents, raised in foster care and a series of children’s homes, endures loss, loneliness, racism, trauma and depression to become a peer of the realm. It is a hopeful and uplifting story about resilience and self-reliance, simultaneously a memoir and a book about memory: some memories being vague and incomplete, others told in graphic, almost cinematic detail. We may be explained in some sense by our memories, but Baroness Lola Young has valiantly and brilliantly shown that we need not be defined by them.

Hugh Quarshie

I love Eight Weeks ... Baroness Lola Young reveals how a child is constantly wronged by a system which was supposed to help ... In Eight Weeks Lola befriends her childhood self. She holds her by the hand as they enter the storm of a system raging around her. I am in awe of the woman who grew from the child in this book ... The pure character necessary to grow through this dark entangled forest of childhood is the stuff of legends. Bravissima Lola

Lemn Sissay, author of My Name is Why

A remarkable account of rejection, resilience and resolve ... It perfectly portrays the essential human need to belong

Michelle Gayle

A remarkable book: at once beautiful and harrowing, deeply unsettling and profoundly life-affirming. It is, quite simply, the best memoir that I’ve read on 50s Britain

John Akomfrah

A superb, moving memoir of a fraught childhood forging a great human spirit. Inspirational!

Helena Kennedy LT KC

Lola Young takes us on a remarkable journey, both personal and political, that few have travelled but all can relate to. An inspiring story from an inspirational storyteller.

Gary Younge

This is a remarkable story about a remarkable woman. An eight-week old baby effectively abandoned by her Nigerian parents, raised in foster care and a series of children’s homes, endures loss, loneliness, racism, trauma and depression to become a peer of the realm. It is a hopeful and uplifting story about resilience and self-reliance, simultaneously a memoir and a book about memory: some memories being vague and incomplete, others told in graphic, almost cinematic detail. We may be explained in some sense by our memories, but Baroness Lola Young has valiantly and brilliantly shown that we need not be defined by them.

Hugh Quarshie

Lola Young went into foster care at eight weeks old: few might have predicted she would go on to become one of the first Black women in the House of Lords. This memoir is the moving story of someone who is only now making sense of her childhood and journey that followed

inews, The best new books to read in November 2024

From growing up in foster care in north London to becoming one of the first Black women to enter the House of Lords, Baroness Lola Young’s memoir is a fascinating account of a life spent questioning her complex past while working as an activist, academic and actor. An eye-opening read.

Stylist

‘An inspirational and riveting story, Baroness Young’s quest to unravel the mystery of why she was placed in care as a baby is both moving and witty’

The House Magazine

As an account of growing up in care, Eight Weeks is unsentimental and extremely clear-sighted

The Independent
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