Description
South London. 1915. Wag, the eldest of twelve in the eccentric, matriarchal Bourton family, sets off for war to escape trouble at home. After returning wounded, he embarks on a seemingly quiet career as an engraver and buys a house for himself and his enigmatic sister Ethel, who filled his thoughts as he was enduring war in the trenches.
Decades later, Wag's nephew Jack is also making his way in South London. After a short spell at Cambridge and a failed attempt to make it as a film producer, he finds himself a job reporting to the notorious Richardson Gang.
As Jack is drawn deeper into the sinister and sadistic gangster underworld, he discovers that his Uncle Wag's apparently tranquil existence may not be all that it seems. Although a generation apart, their paths are about to intersect...
Narrated in alternating voices by Wag and Jack, The Book of Wag is a richly woven portrait of South London at a wild, lawless time that has now passed. Part fiction and part family memoir, it draws on the handwritten, unreliable war journal by author Paul Sidey's own uncle, and other family stories. Dramatic, funny, tender and tense, it is the story of one family's journey through the ever-evolving landscape of 20th-century London.
A richly woven novel, tender and dramatic in equal measure, following the eccentric Burton family through the ever-evolving landscape of twentieth-century London.
About the Author
Paul Sidey was a greatly respected and much-loved editor who started his career at Penguin in 1970. In 1980 he moved to Hutchinson, where he worked as an Editorial Director until his retirement in 2012. When his children were young, he published two volumes of poems for children. Following his retirement, he wrote three novels based on Arthurian and Greek legend, and then-a few months before his death of cancer in September 2014-completed The Book of Wag.
Reviews
"Deftly told and packed with action." * Daily Mail *
"It's an utterly charming novel... I loved it. It deserves to be published, not only because it's Paul, but because it's a richly-woven tapestry of a certain time (well, times) and of another London, erudite and witty and brimming with life." -- Patrick Janson-Smith
"Elegantly written, deftly constructed, and high-spirited; a cracking tale, masterfully told." * John Lahr *
"Inventive and robust, by turns tender and violent, this is a story about family, a changing world, and how we find our place." * Rachel Joyce *
"Two generations of South Londoners weave between love and crime in a vivid and picaresque journey." * Lissa Evans *
Book Information
ISBN 9781783522651
Author Paul Sidey
Format Hardback
Page Count 352
Imprint Unbound Digital
Publisher Unbound
Dimensions(mm) 240mm * 159mm * 32mm