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OverviewCan you bond with someone who's on borrowed time? Victor's mum Jayne is stuck between life and death in a London hospital. Visiting from the Isle of Wight, Victor sofa-surfs at his daughter's flat, accidentally begins an affair with an attractive doctor and battles his dyslexia to record Jayne's memoirs. She's been a top political journalist; he's a sometime actor and pantomime dame, but she's mistaking him for his favoured elder brother William, a Tory MP. To add to the confusion, Jayne's convinced she's being visited at night by former Labour prime minister Harold Wilson. Victor and Jayne have a brittle relationship. After many false dawns, he hopes they may bond at last over her rambling and disjointed tales. As the days of her illness blur into weeks, Victor pieces together family secrets that throw new light on his own bittersweet story. At the heart of it all is a feature article, Sons of Great Men, that Jayne wrote in the 1960s to gain a foothold in the male-dominated newsroom of a Fleet Street paper. Victor's summer reckoning - with family, mortality, work, love and belonging - may strike a chord with those who know how it feels to reach one of life's crossroads. Special features: book group discussion prompts and a bonus short story. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Adrian RossPublisher: atwr books Imprint: atwr books ISBN: 9781919253008ISBN 10: 1919253009 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 01 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'Witty and engaging with quirky characters and relatable situations. Poignant, insightful but with lots of humour too, I thoroughly enjoyed this debut novel.' - Portobello Book Blog 'Funny, wise and beautifully written. The characters are all well-drawn and believable. Victor is a personable, engaging, relatable narrator. The locations are well described, sometimes hilariously. Dialogue is handled superbly. Your attention never wanders even during digressions. The fictional world is sustained from start to finish in an assured and apparently effortless way. An astonishing achievement.' - Singer-songwriter Vernon Equinox Author InformationAdrian Ross has contributed to the New Writing Scotland anthology, The Reviews Hub website and the print magazines Postbox (Scotland's international short story magazine) and Writers' Forum. He studied Drama and Film at the University of East Anglia, where he was a founding member of Minotaur Theatre Company. His improvised career has ranged across the arts, media and adult education sectors. He also taught evening classes for Cardiff University, in Creative Writing, Film Studies, Theatre and Arts Management. He lives in his native city of Edinburgh with his wife, Sarah, a fellow writer and poet. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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