by PatrickGale (Author)
A composer who finds success in his later years surveys his grandchildren as they come to terms with the harsher facts of modern life.
A young composer, Edward Pepper, is exiled from his native Germany by the war, struck down with TB, and left to languish in an isolation hospital. But then he falls in love with his doctor, Sally Banks, and his world is transformed. They set up home in a bizarre dodecahedral folly, The Roundel - a potent place, which grows in significance as it bears witness to their family's tragedies and joys. The years pass, and Edward watches from this sanctuary as both his grandchildren, Jamie and Alison, fall prey to the charms of Sam, an enigmatic builder, and have to come to terms with some of the tougher facts of life.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 560
Edition: New e.
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Published: 07 Jan 2008
ISBN 10: 0006547680
ISBN 13: 9780006547686
Book Overview: A composer who finds success in his later years surveys his grandchildren as they come to terms with the harsher facts of modern life. / Gale has a prodigious talent for spinning a fantastic yarn, peopled with very real, sympathetic characters / Competition: Joanna Trollope; Kate Atkinson
`Patrick Gale offers us so much more than facts in this extraordinary blockbuster of a novel. Its exploration of family ties and tyranny is encompassed within a deft narrative. Much like the late Ivy Compton-Burnett, Gale presents us with a family saga which both questions and defies present day morality. Always fluent, Gale manages to be both brutal and witty. His analysis of the family tree is rooted in compassion and insight and expounded resoundingly well.' Time Out
`Wonderfully vivid, this novel is peopled with characters who compel you to care.' She
`Gale's best and most complex novel. Gale is both a shameless romantic and hip enough to get away with it. His moralised narrative has as its counterpart a rigorous underpinning of craft. This reads, page by page, like a superior gushy blockbuster, but has, as part of its form and subject, a sober consideration of the place of sentiment and rigour in life and art.' New Statesman
`Brilliant. Vastly readable.' Marie Claire
`It is impossible to put The Facts of Life down. A rural English blockbuster. It is beautifully done.' Daily Telegraph
`Deftly characterised, deeply involving and relevant. A memorable achievement.' The Times
Patrick Gale was born in 1962 on the Isle of Wight. He was educated at Winchester and Oxford and now writes full time. He is the author of thirteen previous novels, including `Rough Music', `Friendly Fire' and his most recent work `Notes from an Exhibition'.