All of the stories are autobiographical and all are set in the writer's native
Swansea in
South Wales. Written over a number of years, the often comic stories show glimpses of his life, from early childhood up to his teens as a young reporter for the
South Wales Daily Post. Thomas claimed, in a letter to
Vernon Watkins, that he had "kept the flippant title for—as the publishers advise—money-making reasons". He claimed also, straining credulity, that the title was not a parody of
James Joyce's
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, even though the general influence of Joyce's
Dubliners was freely acknowledged. In August 1939 Thomas wrote to Watkins: "I've been busy over stories, pot-boiling stories for a book, semi-autobiographical, to be finished by Christmas." ==Reception==