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Your Fault

Availability: Out of Stock
ISBN: 9781784631802
AuthorCowan, Andrew
Pub Date15/05/2019
BindingTrade PB
Pages208
CountryGBR
Dewey823.92
Publisher: Salt Publishing
Quick overview Salt is to publish a visceral novel of childhood, memory, and the inheritance of masculine guilt by Andrew Cowan - a Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year and winner of the Betty Trask Award. It is the sixth novel from the celebrated Director of the Creative Writing programme at UEA.
€14.72

`Elegant, unsparing, meticulously detailed novel in which a conscientious boy grows up with bedeviled parents. Where do men come from? They come from boys. Look again.' -Margaret Atwood

`A small masterpiece' -Phil Baker, The Sunday Times

`A terse, bitterly poignant novel about guilt and the art of retrospection' -Claire Allfree, Daily Mail

`If clarity of recollection is an art, Andrew Cowan is a master.' -Jane Graham, Big Issue

Set in a 1960s English new town, Your Fault charts one boy's childhood from first memory to first love. A year older in each chapter, Peter's story is told to him by his future self as he attempts to recreate the optimism and futurism of the 1960s, and to reveal how that utopianism fares as it emerges into the Seventies. It's an untold story of British working class experience, written with extraordinary precision and tenderness.

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Product description

`Elegant, unsparing, meticulously detailed novel in which a conscientious boy grows up with bedeviled parents. Where do men come from? They come from boys. Look again.' -Margaret Atwood

`A small masterpiece' -Phil Baker, The Sunday Times

`A terse, bitterly poignant novel about guilt and the art of retrospection' -Claire Allfree, Daily Mail

`If clarity of recollection is an art, Andrew Cowan is a master.' -Jane Graham, Big Issue

Set in a 1960s English new town, Your Fault charts one boy's childhood from first memory to first love. A year older in each chapter, Peter's story is told to him by his future self as he attempts to recreate the optimism and futurism of the 1960s, and to reveal how that utopianism fares as it emerges into the Seventies. It's an untold story of British working class experience, written with extraordinary precision and tenderness.