BOOK REVIEW: GYPSY BOY: MY LIFE IN THE SECRET WORLD OF THE ROMANY GYPSIES

Posted on 05 April 2012

By TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER

“Gypsy Boy: My Life in the Secret World of the Romany Gypsies” by Mikey Walsh c.2012, Thomas Dunne Books $24.99 U.S. & Canada 288 pages When you were very small, there wasn’t much you wanted. Clean diapers, a cuddle, and food made the shortlist early on. Stuffed animals were slowly added, then siblings, books, and anything upon which you could climb.

By the time you hit school age, your wants became more complicated.

You wanted to be somehow famous. You wanted to stay up late, snack before dinner, and possess that cool toy you saw on TV. You wanted to grow up fast.

Author Mikey Walsh wanted those things, too, but he never wanted to become a fighter. As you’ll see in his memoir, “Gypsy Boy,” his father had other ideas. Mikey Walsh’s father was “fiercely determined” to have a son.

In Romany culture, having a male child was everything – even more so for the Walsh family, which was known for generations of “manly” men who were good with their fists. So, even though his mother was told that her heart condition precluded having a second child, Mikey followed his sister in succession. Upon the happy event, Mr. Walsh hung golden boxing gloves around his newborn son’s neck. Growing up, Mikey loved the dramatic. He and his older sister, Frankie, enjoyed playing dress-up and pretending games. They loved watching TV and, largely unsupervised, they played outside with their cousins, who lived on the same compound.

It was an idyllic early childhood, but at age four, Mikey’s destiny caught up with him. His father decided that it was time to start fight training, and the best way to do it was to beat the boy. His disgust at Mikey’s cries meant more punches.

By age seven, Mikey was being “hidden” in school by his mother, which was an unusual move. Gypsies were mostly forbidden to mingle with “Gorgias,” and sending a child to a Gorgia school was scandalous. It was her way of keeping Mikey safe, however, and it gave him a chance at an education, which was something she didn’t have. Yet, the beatings continued: always daily, sometimes more.

By age 13, Mikey realized that he was gay which, he knew, would enrage his father. He also knew that he needed to escape before it cost him his life.

Stunned, simply nowhere-to-go-stunned: that was me at the end of reading this book. Pseudonymous author Mikey Walsh lulls his readers into first believing that they’re reading a droll memoir filled with quirky relatives and a secret world about which few have dared to write. Walsh busts open a few myths about Romany culture, pokes gentle fun at his family, and makes us laugh out loud while he’s doing it.

But much like a dog that can’t be trusted, “Gypsy Boy” turns quick and bites. Walsh takes the laughter and, two pages later, spins it with horror and a painful emotionlessness that only serves to underscore the brutality he describes, which ultimately leads to an end that shimmers like a tambourine.

Published in Europe three years ago, “Gypsy Boy” is new stateside and absolutely can’t be missed. If you’re up for a funny, brutal, sharp memoir, this is the book you want.

Contact Terri Schlichenmeyer at
The Bookworm Sez, LLC,
bookwormsez@ yahoo.com.

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