An extraordinary chapter of autobiography, which describes the author's
life between his twentieth and thirtieth years. When he went to Canada
at the age of twenty he had never tasted alcohol or tobacco or been
inside a theatre, and had only obtained books surreptitiously. He was,
in fact, as 'green' as could be - and naturally he paid the
consequences. After a brief stay in an office he invested his small
capital in a dairy farm, which soon went out of business. Nothing
daunted, Mr. Blackwood and his friend tried to run a public house, with
disastrous consequences. They made a getaway to New York, and it was
there that most of the adventures and the most extraordinary took place.
The author's experiences as a crime reporter, his relationships with the
'confidence man' Boyd, and the eccentric old mendicant Alfred H. Louis,
his brief but exciting career as a gold prospector are not easily
forgotten. The book was originally published under the title Episodes
Before Thirty, and Mr. Blackwood has considerably revised the text for
the present edition.