His family moved to Carlisle in northern England when Davies was 11 and he attended the Creighton School in the city. Davies lived in Carlisle until he moved to study at university. During this time his father, who was a former Royal Air Force pay clerk, developed multiple sclerosis and had to retire on medical grounds from a civil service career.
Davies joined the sixth form at Carlisle Grammar School and was awarded a place at University College, Durham to read for an honours degree in History, but after his first year he switched to a general arts course. He gained his first writing experience as a student, contributing to the university newspaper, Palatinate, where one of his fellow student journalists was the future fashion writer Colin McDowell.[2] After completing his degree course he stayed on at Durham for another year to gain a teaching diploma and avoid National Service.[3]
Writing career
After he left university, Davies worked as a journalist, and in 1965 he wrote the novel Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush, which was made into a film of the same name in 1967. He raised the idea of a biography of the Beatles with Paul McCartney when he met him to discuss the possibility of providing the theme song for the film. McCartney liked the idea of the book because inaccurate information had been published about the group but he advised him to obtain the approval of Brian Epstein.[3] Epstein agreed to the proposal and the resulting authorised biography, The Beatles, was published in 1968. John Lennon mentioned in his 1970 Rolling Stone interview that he considered the book "bullshit", though Lennon at the time was vigorously debunking the Beatles' myth and anyone who had helped to create it.[4]
In 1972, Davies wrote a book about football, The Glory Game, a behind-the-scenes portrait of Tottenham Hotspur. Davies also wrote a column for Punch about his daily life, called "Father's Day", presenting himself as a harried paterfamilias. In 1974, he was sent by The Sunday Times to look at a comprehensive school in action. He wrote three articles and then stayed on at the school – Creighton School in Muswell Hill, north London, now part of Fortismere School – to watch and study through a year in its life. The result was a book, the Creighton Report, published in 1976.[5]
Davies has also written a biography of the fell walker Alfred Wainwright, and many works about the topography and history of the Lake District.
In children's literature, he has written the Ossie, Flossie Teacake and Snotty Bumstead series of novels.
As a ghostwriter, he has worked on the autobiographies of footballers Wayne Rooney, Paul Gascoigne and Dwight Yorke. The Rooney biography led to a successful libel action in 2008 by David Moyes, the manager of his former club, Everton. He has also ghostwritten politician John Prescott's 2008 autobiography, Prezza, My Story: Pulling no Punches.[6]
He writes a football column for the New Statesman.[7] A compilation of these articles was released as a book, The Fan, in 2005 by Pomona Press. Davies writes "Confessions of a Collector" in The Guardian's Weekend colour magazine.[8] He has written a book about his collections with the same title.
During the Beatles sessions for the Let It Be album, the Beatles recorded a song called "There You Go Eddie" about Hunter Davies that appears on bootlegs. It was not officially released.[9]
Davies has stated that the first football team he supported was Queen of the South, when he lived in Dumfries.[1] After moving to Carlisle aged 11, he adopted English Football League club Carlisle United.[11]
A long-term resident of London, Davies' third adopted team is Tottenham Hotspur.[12] In international football, Davies supports Scotland.[13]
During the summer months they lived in their second home near Loweswater in the Lake District.[17] It was sold in July 2016.[18] His autobiographyThe Beatles, Football and Me was published in 2007.[3]
Selected works
Novels
Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (1965)
Rise and Fall of Jake Sullivan (1970)
A Very Loving Couple (1971)
Body Charge (1972)
Non-Fiction
The Beatles: The Authorised Biography (1968)
The Other Half: Ten Case Histories of the new Poor Rich (1968)
The Glory Game (1972)
A Walk Along the Wall (1976)
The Creighton Report: A Year in the Life of a Comprehensive School (1976)
The Beatles, Revised Edition (1978)
The Joy of Stamps (1983)
A Walk Round London's Parks (1983)
The Beatles, 2nd Revised Edition (1986)
The Teller of Tales: In Search of Robert Louis Stevenson (1994)
Wainwright: The Biography (1995)
West Cumbrian Views (1998)
London to Loweswater: A Journey through England at the end of the Twentieth Century (1999)
The Quarrymen (2001)
Boots, Balls and Haircuts (2003)
I Love Football (2006)
The Second Half (2006)
The Beatles, Football and Me (2007)
The Bumper Book of Football (2007)
Confessions of a Collector (2009)
Postcards from the Edge of Football A Social History of a British Game (2010)
The Beatles Lyrics (2014)
The Biscuit Girls (2014)
The Co-Op's Got Bananas: A Memoir of Growing Up in the Post-War North (2016)
Bosnia and Herzegovina Travel Guide (2016)
A Life in the Day (2017)
The Beatles: The Authorised Biography 50th Anniversary Edition (2018)
Happy Old Me: How to Live A Long Life, and Really Enjoy It (2019)
The Heath: My Year on Hampstead Heath (2021)
Love in Old Age: My Year in the Wight House (2023)
References
^ ab"Hunter Davies". Qosfc.com. 26 September 2009. Archived from the original on 29 June 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
^"Editorial". Palatinate (99): 2. 22 February 1957. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
^ abcDavies, Hunter (28 June 2007). The Beatles, Football and Me. Headline Book Publishing. ISBN978-0755314034.
^Lennon Remembers: the Rolling Stone interviews. Penguin, 1972. ISBN0-14-003581-8