Book description
The fresh and exciting debut novel by the author of
Konstantin
"Immensely enjoyable . . . almost unbearably
tense" The Guardian
In an attic in Southwest London, an acid
factory has just been dismantled. Six students, among them the
luminously sexy Belle, are speeding in a decommissioned ambulance
towards a tiny cottage in the Welsh borders. Two homicidal drug
dealers and one middle-aged police inspector are giving
chase.
Meanwhile, Belle's jilted lover Angus stares out of his
cottage window at shadows sliding across the grassy hillside, listens
to squirrels fidgeting in the eaves and turns his thoughts to a
squadron of young Japanese pilots, setting out from a Kyushu airstrip
in 1945 intent on restarting the Second World War.
And that's
just the beginning…
In this remarkable debut, Tom Bullough
brilliantly combines the best rites-of-passage storytelling with the
helter-skelter adroitness of a road movie.
Tom Bullough grew up on a Welsh hill farm. He studied at London
University and has worked as a music promoter in Zimbabwe and a firewood
deliveryman in Wales. A was his debut book. Tom is also the author of
the acclaimed The Claude Glass (Sort of Books, 2007) and Konstantin
(Penguin 2012)