Seventeen by Joe Gibson

Seventeen by Joe Gibson

Published by Gallery UK and Simon and Schuster on 20 July

Available from all Good Bookshops

What They Say

It’s 1992. Like every other seventeen-year-old boy, Joe has one eye on his studies, the other on his social life – smoking, Britpop, girls. He’s looking ahead to a gap year full of travel and adventure before university when his teacher – attractive, mid-thirties – takes an interest in him. It seems like a fantasy come true.  

For his final two years at school, he is bound to her, a woman twice his age, in an increasingly tangled web of coercion, sex and lies. Their affair, a product of complex grooming and a shocking abuse of authority, is played out in the corridors of one of Britain’s major private schools, under the noses of people who suspected, even knew, but said nothing. 

Thirty years on, this is Joe’s gripping record of the illicit relationship that dominated his adolescence and dictated the course of his life. With a heady dose of nineties nostalgia and the perfectly captured mood of those final months at school, Joe charts the enduring legacy of deceit and the indelibility of decisions made at seventeen. 

What I Say

You may have seen on my Twitter feed that I talked about a book that had stopped me in my tracks, and I haven’t been able to stop thinking about since I read it (you can possibly tell by the number of post its in my copy in the picture!)

Lots of people were curious to know, and so today, I can tell you that the book I am talking about is called Seventeen. It is a memoir written by Joe Gibson (this is a pseudonym), which tells the story of Joe, as a seventeen year old, who had an affair with his thirty five year old teacher called Miss P.

Joe was awarded a bursary to study at a private school which was 150 miles away from his parents. They sorted out accommodation for him with some family friends, who were caring people, but basically left Joe to do what he wanted to do. He finds a group of friends quite quickly, and settles into school life, but then discovers that his Dad is leaving and his mum and dad are getting divorced.

Understandably upset, and realising how far away from home he is, he goes to a pub to drown his sorrows. It is there he bumps into Miss P, who listens to and comforts him and Joe realises that he is attracted to his teacher.

One evening Miss P asks him to help her tidy up the classroom, and they eventually end up at her flat where they drink wine together and kiss. Very quickly, this turns into a fully blown affair, and Joe, although he knows this is his teacher, and this is not right, realises that he loves Miss P – or Ali, as she now becomes to him.

Joe’s seventeen year old voice comes through very clearly throughout the memoir. He at times seems almost proud of their relationship, their sex life, and relishing the time they spend together, desperate to see her again, yet also still having to be the person his friends know. He has to be the seventeen year old they know – half listening to his friends as they debate which girls in their classes they fancy, trying to maintain the facade of a normal student, but harbouring this secret that he knows would blow his whole world apart if it ever comes out. So he says nothing.

What becomes clear to the reader very quickly is that this is not an equal relationship. Miss P controls every aspect of it – she devises the most incredible plans, comes up with the complicated and seemingly safe logistics to make sure that they can see each other, but also making sure little by little that Joe is entirely under her control. Miss P decides when and where they can see each other, she ignores him for periods at school, and taunts him about being a school boy when it seems that he is trying to think for himself.

As they become more and more involved, Joe distances himself from his friends and family, his school work starts to suffer, and his hopes of going to Oxford slip from his grasp. At the same time, his relationship with Ali intensifies, and her insistence that they spend time together in increasingly dangerous ways are to be honest, jaw dropping to say the least. Joe is so far entrenched in this relationship that he can’t see what we all can – that he is powerless, and entirely under Miss P’s control.

Seventeen honestly reads like fiction -as if Joe and Miss P are characters in a novel that you read, talk about and put on a shelf. Of course this is a memoir, these are real people, and their lives still go on. One of the most incredible parts of Joe’s story is what happens to the relationship – and no, I’m not going to tell you what that is.

I couldn’t stop thinking about Seventeen when I read it because I have so many questions. Why Joe? Had she done it before? Why didn’t the friends she told report her? What was her motive for getting involved with Joe? Was Ali telling the truth about her past relationships at all?

Yet something else supersedes all that, because I keep thinking about my seventeen year old son and what it would be like for him if it happened to him, and that is what Joe illustrates so clearly. At the very heart of all this, we need to understand that Joe is a seventeen year old school boy, and Miss P is his thirty five year old teacher.

It should never have happened, but it did, and if Seventeen does one thing, it made me start a conversation with my own son about what had happened to Joe, and how that behaviour from an adult is never acceptable. We also learn that it wasn’t until 2000 that it became illegal for a teacher to have a sexual relationship with a 16 or 17 year old – which makes you wonder how many times this story played out in other schools, and what happened to those people whose stories we may never know.

This is why I think it’s such a thought provoking memoir, because it made me stop and think about how I communicate with my son – when Joe was seventeen, there wasn’t social media and mobile phones, you had to either use the home phone or find a pay phone to contact someone, or even go physically to see them. Here and now, our teenagers are so busy looking down, connected to a world we can’t access, it is harder and harder to really find out what is happening in their lives, and that is why Seventeen is such an important book.

Now more than ever we need to be present for teenagers, to make sure that Joe’s story is something that can’t happen again. Joe says in the acknowledgements that he hopes by finding his voice seventeen years later, and articulating his experience that he can encourage other people to do the same. I think Joe has also started a timely conversation about power and control and needing to make sure that in a time of digital communication where we aren’t party to everything that happens on a screen that we don’t forget about simply talking to and listening to our children too to make sure Joe’s story is not repeated.

I absolutely loved it.

Thank you so much to Sabah Khan at Simon and Schuster for my finished copy in exchange for an honest review.

6 thoughts on “Seventeen by Joe Gibson

  1. Charles says:
    Charles's avatar

    Just finished it!
    I was a 16 year old boy in 1991 and a (female) teacher who was 49 at my boarding school who taught the younger boy’s not me. She was given the job of teaching us leavers sex education. She asked us one at a time if we were virgins, I said yes and she acted very surprised and then after I left school she came to visit me, met my mum told her about my short stories and how she could help me write them. She took me to the pub for a meal and for dessert I wanted a knickerbocker glory (I am 16!) she asked for 2 long spoons so we could share…..

    There’s a whole lot more to this story I go to her house and stay and letters we send each other and so on.

    Joe’s book has made me think: What did they see in us?

    I was so naive

    I will be 49 this November and J if she is still alive will be 82

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    • yearsofreadingselfishly says:
      yearsofreadingselfishly's avatar

      Hello Charles,
      Thank you so much for not only reading my blog post, but for also sharing your story.

      In the final part of Seventeen, Joe says how he hopes his story will help others find their voice, and I really hope that it has helped you, and that if you need to talk to someone about it, you can find the help and support you need.

      Thank you for taking the time to comment, and I wish you all the best,

      Clare.

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  2. Andrew Nelson says:
    Andrew Nelson's avatar

    Yes I read the book and I found it extremely interesting. I was attracted to the book since I had been through a similar but not identical experience when I was a teenager myself, My general comments on the Case Study described by Joe Gibson are as follows. (1) The “affair'”tends to differ from other such affairs in that although the boy was manipulated by this older woman in terms of their sexual relationship, she was not mentally abusing him by carrying out concurrent relationships with deliberate intent to make him jealous and insecure. In fact it appears that she was totally “dedicated” to him throughout. (2) The affair also differed from other such liaisons in that it was never terminated by the older woman. Generally such an abuser preys on a vulnerable younger person, enjoys exerting power over them and then dumps them for some other “fall” guy. (3) Also the boy himself, although he had been through his parents’ divorce was generally a very balanced intelligent person with many friends and girlfriends. Significantly he excelled academically and in his outside interests. In other such cases the victim is usually a” loser” and easily manipulated. (4) I was also surprised at the reaction to the book. Readers described it as shocking, sensational and so forth. These people clearly did not live in the ’60s and 70s during the period of the grand sexual awakening. Although this generally was a good thing, it led to a lot of such abusive behaviour on both sides of the gender divide popularised in films like “The Graduate” and “The Knack”.

    My own experience came when I was 19 having gone through a traumatic childhood leading to expulsion from Public School and subsequently leaving tha family home as “damaged goods”. I was in the process of picking up the pieces completing an External Degree at Technical College. I was sharing a flat with three other guys and having real problems continuing with my academic work. A 30 year old woman lived in the flat underneath us. She had a history of “problems”. To cut a long story short, she seduced me one evening and over the ensuing weeks groomed me into a full scale sexual relationship. I became totally besotted with her. This affair lasted over a summer into the autumn. I continually felt insecure with her and my studies dwindled to zero. Finally she dumped me for someone else. Susequently I craved for her and into the next year she again seduced me and invited me to share her house with her new guy. I of course complied and in the next few months, she totally humilated me. In the end I left. This cathartc experience caused me to take stock. I took up endurance cycling and walking, worked fanatically for the next two years and graduated with a First Class Honours. I have susequently had a fantastically successful career and brilliant marriage although I have never completely got over that experience of 53 years ago. This woman was clearly a troubled predator who enjoyed (in her own words) picking up vulnerable boys/men and attempting to destroy them. I do not know what ever happened to her. Her subsequent liaison (after me) ended 13 years later and she again remarried.

    In summary I do not think Miss P was such a person. That she abused Gison is beyond reasonable doubt. But he did not seem to be so trobled during the initial relationship. The right thing to do was for her to terminate the relationship when it all broke out publically. This would have been very painful for Gibson but he would have eventually got over it and started again his life. That the relationship carried on for another nearly seventeen years was the worst thing since it prevented him from “moving on” at an early stage .

    Uiende

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    • yearsofreadingselfishly says:
      yearsofreadingselfishly's avatar

      Dear Andrew,

      Thank you so much for taking the time to share your story. I am very honoured that you felt able to tell it on my blog, and I can’t imagine what you have been through.

      One thing I know since writing this blog about Joe’s book is that people who may not have had the confidence to articulate their experiences are now doing so – or that perhaps since reading Joe’s book it is something I am much more aware of.

      I am so pleased for you that you have had a brilliant career and wonderful marriage, and can imagine that your experience will never leave you, but that in talking so bravely about what you went through, that others may find their voices too.

      Thank you so much for telling me this, and wishing you all the best.

      Clare

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