Synopses & Reviews
“Exceptional . . . Clanchy has a wincingly accurate eye for social comedy, a vivid descriptive sense, and profound understanding of her characters. This is a delectable read.” --Daily Mail (UK)
In response to an advertisement, Struan Robertson, orphan, genius, and just seventeen, leaves his dour native town in Scotland, and arrives at a creaky mansion in London in the freakishly hot summer of 1989. His job, he finds, is to care for playwright and one-time literary star Phillip Prys, dumbfounded and paralyzed by a massive stroke, because, though Phillips two teenage children, two wives, and a literary agent all rattle 'round his large house, they are each too busy with their peculiar obsessions to do it themselves. As the city bakes, Struan finds himself tangled in a midsummer's dream of mistaken identity, giddying property prices, wild swimming, and overwhelming passions. For everyone, it is to be a life-changing summer.
Meeting the English is a bright book about dark subjects--a tale about kindness and its limits, told with love. It is a coming of age story for anyone who has ever felt themselves to be an outsider; a love story for the awkward; and a comedy for anyone who has ever lived in a family. Written by an acclaimed writer of poetry, non-fiction, and short stories, this glorious debut novel is spiked with witty dialogue and jostling with gleeful, zesty characters.
Review
Praise for Meeting the English“With wit and zest, Clanchy creates social comedy out of teeth-clenching situations . . . Clanchys trenchant, often very funny prose also shimmers with sensual pleasures . . . Meeting the English is a richly conceived, original and very entertaining novel.” -Guardian (UK)
“A comedy of manners with a sharp edge . . . With its cast of artsy, highly strung, badly behaved north Londoners, Meeting the English feels like an updated Iris Murdoch novel, with sharper haircuts and more Laura Ashley furnishings.” --Independent on Sunday (UK)
“A charming comic novel with an appealing lightness of touch.” --Literary Review
“Meeting the English is a comedy of manners and a comedy of morals . . . [it] has a frothy charm. Moreover, in the rather appalling Myfanwy, Clanchy presents us with a character whom it is a pleasure to meet in a novel, though one would fly from her in real life.” -Scotsman (UK)
“Lacerating social observation mixed with Shakespearean comedy powers Kate Clanchys first novel . . . her agility with language makes the sentences shimmer.” --Sunday Telegraph (UK)
“An exceptional first novel . . . Clanchy switches multi-viewpoints adroitly . . . she has a wincingly accurate eye for social comedy, a vivid descriptive sense, and profound understanding of her characters. This is a delectable read - it should certainly be on one or more of this years awards lists.” --Daily Mail (UK)
“What unfolds is a long, hot summer with more than a little Midsummer Night's Dream about it. The gloriously heady heat, high-running tempers and emotions are offset by the cool lightness of Clanchy's prose, shot through with a wonderfully refreshing comedic breeze. Meeting the English is an utter delight.” -Observer (UK)
“A charming and comedic coming-of-age novel . . . very funny indeed; a literary novel that manages to pack an irreverent punch and take a wry look at the fashion and sensibilities of the late 1980s.” -Bookseller (UK)
“A bracingly trenchant romantic revenge comedy which ends in an orgy of poetic justice, its theme the overthrow of tyrants, its hero a seventeen-year-old Scot and its setting Hampstead in the long hot summer of 1989.” --Times Literary Supplement Books of the Year (UK)
“Powered by an addictively forward-marching narrative . . . Clanchy displays a verbal inventiveness that unlocks the alarming, delectable newness of the world Struan encounters.” --Times Literary Supplement (UK)
“Kate Clanchy's sharp and charming first novel Meeting the English is . . . an accomplished and lively work, good-natured - kindness is particularly prized - but also underwritten by a keen understanding of the way we live . . . Clanchy, who is a distinguished poet, writes prose to relish . . . this is a strong and rather gallant novel of family life and what (if anything) can be done about it.” --Financial Times
“Every so often, an author bursts onto the scene with a freshness and originality that make the reader give a metaphorical three cheers. Kate Clanchy, who has won awards for her poetry, is one such; her debut novel is funny and insightful and her empathetic, law-abiding hero is full of blinding common sense, a less wet version of Adrian Mole . . . Clanchy either knows a lot about seeing the funny side of a depressing domestic situation or she has an acute eye. Either way, you'll want to hear more from her.” --Country Life (UK)
“A riveting read.” --Oxford Times (UK)
“Utterly enchanting; naughty, funny, evocative.” --Patrick Gale, author of Rough Music
About the Author
KATE CLANCHY was born and grew up in Scotland but now lives in England. Her poetry collections, Slattern, Samarkand, and Newborn, have brought her many literary awards and an unusually wide audience. She is the author of the acclaimed memoir Antigona and Me, and was the 2008 winner of the Writers Guild Best Book Award. She has also written extensively for Radio 4 and reviews and writes commentary for The Guardian. Meeting the English was shortlisted for the Costa First Novel award.