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Description
'The funniest man in Britain has written a wonderful novel. Rejoice!' - Richard Osman
'Very funny set pieces and one-liners' - Daily Mail
Clive Hapgood is feeling stuck.
The private school he teaches at is consuming his life, no thanks to wretched headteacher Julian Crouch. The gentle country life Clive envisaged has stifled him and left his marriage on the brink. What he needs is a holiday - something to remind him and Helen what life used to be like. But when things don't go to plan, and an incident at school begins to weigh heavy on his head, Clive's life starts to unravel in front of him. Has he got it in him to turn things around, whatever the cost? After all, it's his own time he's wasting...
Wonderfully funny and often moving, this brilliant novel by star of The Durrells and Would I Lie To You? is set to be the stand-out book of the summer. 'Very funny' - Metro
'Well-observed . . . [Jupp] has fun skewering the absurdities of public-school life' - Mail on Sunday
'A sensitive and insightful depiction of a midlife crisis, while simultaneously extracting every last ounce of comedy and farce from Clive's situation . . . Jupp writes in the wonderfully wry, deadpan style comic style that his fans will recognise from his TV and radio appearance' - Sunday Express
For readers of Jonathan Coe, Mark Watson, Michael Frayn and David Nicholls.
'The funniest man in Britain has written a wonderful novel. Rejoice!' - Richard Osman
'Very funny set pieces and one-liners' - Daily Mail
'The funniest man in Britain has written a wonderful novel. Rejoice!' - Richard Osman
'Very funny set pieces and one-liners' - Daily Mail
Clive Hapgood is feeling stuck.
The private school he teaches at is consuming his life, no thanks to wretched headteacher Julian Crouch. The gentle country life Clive envisaged has stifled him and left his marriage on the brink. What he needs is a holiday - something to remind him and Helen what life used to be like. But when things don't go to plan, and an incident at school begins to weigh heavy on his head, Clive's life starts to unravel in front of him. Has he got it in him to turn things around, whatever the cost? After all, it's his own time he's wasting...
Wonderfully funny and often moving, this brilliant novel by star of The Durrells and Would I Lie To You? is set to be the stand-out book of the summer. 'Very funny' - Metro
'Well-observed . . . [Jupp] has fun skewering the absurdities of public-school life' - Mail on Sunday
'A sensitive and insightful depiction of a midlife crisis, while simultaneously extracting every last ounce of comedy and farce from Clive's situation . . . Jupp writes in the wonderfully wry, deadpan style comic style that his fans will recognise from his TV and radio appearance' - Sunday Express
For readers of Jonathan Coe, Mark Watson, Michael Frayn and David Nicholls.
The year is 1998 and Clive Hapgood is an overworked History teacher in a small public school in this debut novel from the talented comedian and actor, Miles Jupp.
Clive is 38, but looks older, his hair greying and a bald patch was developing after years of struggle to juggle the demands of a school which takes advantage of him and his home life dominated by his wife and two young daughters.
Jupp is a good writer and creates a vivid portrait of both the minutiae of Clive's desperately overburdened existence at Frampton School and the horrors of a family holiday in Nornandy.
Already a proven talent in other fields, Jupp proves his authorial credentials in a novel which contains some similarities to Kingsley Amis's Lucky Jim.
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Chris H, Reviewer
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The year is 1998 and Clive Hapgood is an overworked History teacher in a small public school in this debut novel from the talented comedian and actor, Miles Jupp.
Clive is 38, but looks older, his hair greying and a bald patch was developing after years of struggle to juggle the demands of a school which takes advantage of him and his home life dominated by his wife and two young daughters.
Jupp is a good writer and creates a vivid portrait of both the minutiae of Clive's desperately overburdened existence at Frampton School and the horrors of a family holiday in Nornandy.
Already a proven talent in other fields, Jupp proves his authorial credentials in a novel which contains some similarities to Kingsley Amis's Lucky Jim.