Description
Filled with Jonathan Harvey's trademark wit, warmth and outrageous humour, The History of Us is a novel about friendship and secrets, the choices we make and the consequences we face.
'I knew Jonathan Harvey could make me laugh. I didn't expect him to make me cry too' - Jojo Moye, author of Me Before You
Liverpool 1985
Kathleen, Adam and Jocelyn are three teenage friends who bond over an unconventional nativity play. They all have ambitions, they all have dreams. Adam wants to be a writer, Jocelyn wants to sing and Kathleen - well, she wants to be an embalmer.
London 2015
Kathleen is a borderline alcoholic, Adam is holding on to a shocking secret and Jocelyn is dead. Where did it all go wrong? How did having the world at their feet turn into having the weight of it on their shoulders?
What happens in the past doesn't always stay in the past . . .
About the Author
Jonathan Harvey comes from Liverpool and is the multi-award-winning writer of the play and film Beautiful Thing, the BAFTA-nominated sitcom Gimme Gimme Gimme, and Beautiful People (Best Comedy: Banff TV Festival). He was on the writing teams for both Coronation Street and The Tracey Ullman Show. His other TV work includes Rev (Best Sitcom: BAFTA), At Home With The Braithwaites, Lilies, The Catherine Tate Show and Murder Most Horrid. He has written twenty stage plays. The History of Us is his fifth novel.
Reviews
Harvey is a constant pleasure: a serious comic writer whose books shine a light on our common humanity -- Alex Marwood
Full of Harvey's wit, warmth, humour and love of the Scouse accent, this is a story of friendships, secrets and the consequences of the bad choices we make * Essentials *
Another absolute delight from the master of the wicked one-liner * Heat *
I knew Jonathan Harvey could make me laugh. I didn't expect him to make me cry too -- Jojo Moyes
A total page turner, very entertaining, then very moving -- Marian Keyes
Book Information
ISBN 9781447298205
Author Jonathan Harvey
Format Paperback
Page Count 400
Imprint Pan Books
Publisher Pan Macmillan
Weight(grams) 422g
Dimensions(mm) 203mm * 127mm * 22mm