The Isle of Dogs

The Isle of Dogs

by Daniel Davies (Author)

Synopsis

Anytown, England, Jeremy Shepherd has reached post-ambition, giving up the trappings of his London life (flash job, flash cars, even flashier girlfriends) and moved back to his home town and his parents' house. By day, he is a low-level civil servant, chained to his desk and content to idle away the hours filing and answering emails. There isn't a lot to do in a small town, but the English are very resourceful and Jeremy quickly finds a hobby that delivers lots of fresh air and exercise. By night, he prowls local car parks to indulge in altogether more challenging pursuits - anonymous sex with strangers. This is no ordinary hobby - each encounter is tinged with a definite air of danger, as police stake out each site and the cloak of anonymity brings its own risks.As the scene's night-time liaisons increasingly threaten the sensibilities of the local Daily Mail readers, things take a turn for the worse. Locals take a dislike to the illicit rendezvous and as the police step up surveillance, private pursuits risk becoming very public.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 192
Edition: Main
Publisher: Serpent's Tail
Published: 22 May 2008

ISBN 10: 1852429984
ISBN 13: 9781852429980

Media Reviews
A cool, dark, sexy nightdrive of a novel. Daniel Davies writes with the detachment and insight of a new J.G.Ballard. -- Toby Litt
Daniel Davies' debut is a crisp page-turner ... a tale of sex in the surveillance society that picks up the challenge of Michel Houellebecq's novels. -- Nicholas Blincoe
Humorous and cringe-worthy... Around the unusual, Houellebecqian story, Daniel Davies has created a recognisable but unflattering portrait of modern Britain with a nod to JG Ballard. -- Ruth Atkins - Bookseller's choice * The Bookseller *
A cultivated meditation on society's preoccupation with celebrity, surveillance and moral panic and a brisk, cautionary tale about the perils of doing it in cars with old ladies. * Arena *
Expertly handled by author Davies, shunning the more obvious sensationalist Collymore ptifalls to show glimpses of JG Ballard and Michel Houellebecq, Isle of Dogs provides an engaging and believable glimpse into another world that befits this CCTV age. * Shortlist *
Author Bio
Daniel Davies was born in Sutton-Coldfield, near Birmingham, in 1973, to a Welsh father and a Polish-German mother. He studied English at Cambridge. His previous jobs include curator at the British Museum, sub-editor of medical journal The Lancet and the Evening Standard. He lived abroad for three years teaching English in Barcelona, Prague and San Sebastian.