Pages: 384 (Paperback) ISBN: 014028446X Pub: Penguin Books Ltd Pub date: 2003-02-06 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 236919
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Editorial Review:The death of homeless man Charlie Buck is unremarkable to everyone except the few passers-by who witness his drunken--and apparently voluntary--fall beneath a speeding lorry. No loved ones or friends attend his last breaths in hospital--his possessions amount to a National Insurance card, a digital watch and a newspaper obituary for a dead composer. But Charlie was a person. He had a wife and a son, his own set of dreams and personal demons, a biography no more and no less studded with dramas, defeats and victories than anyone else's. This is the mission of Rumours of a Hurricane, Tim Lott's second novel: to chart the life of a single man, revealing it to be remarkable in its ordinariness and epic within its narrow confines. The backdrop to Charlie's tragic saga is the relentlessly changing Britain of the 1980s, a nation twisted by greed and discontent. History weaves gracefully in and out of the tale, its hero riding high as he buys his own council flat and invests in the stock market; laid low as the great storms and the recession hit his home and his business. But Lott's grasp of the recent past is by no means his most impressive talent--what dazzles on every page is his powerful grasp of the human soul and his ability to turn harsh truths into some truly fascinating fiction. Like Lott's first novel White City Blue, this is an uncompromising book, one whose messages we ignore at our peril. --Matthew Baylis Reader Reviews:Page turning, brilliant evocation of the Thatcher Years (3/3 people found this helpful)This book engages immediately. I read it within twenty-fours hours as 'can't put-it-down' read. Being a young working mother in the nineteen eighties I was proably too busy to remember the era from a sociological point of view, but Tim brought it all back with amazing accuracy. Yes - we had a Goblin Teasmade! It was not just the anecdotal references that caught the imagination. His verdict on the boom-and-bust of the times was very accurately portrayed. I was so sorry to say goodbye to the characters. I have also enjoyed White City Blues in the past. Tim Lott is one of our best modern writers and there not a boring minute in Rumours of a Hurricane. Brilliant. Read it. Exceptional (7/7 people found this helpful)This book is a beautifully written account of very ordinary people, going through their lives in the midst of what was always known in my house as 'The Thatcher Terror'. I'd never read any of Tim Lott's novels before, and I was genuinely surprised at the skill and sensitivity with which he painted his characters. Journalists aren't exactly known for their subtlety and sensitivity... Best novel I've read for ages (5/6 people found this helpful)This is an excellent novel, with an interesting, believable storyline and exceptionally well observed characters. The moments and situations of life described by Lott are so perfectly drawn it's almmost painful, and you loyalties are truly split between a sensible response and one of sheer pity for a person chewed up by society. A much more mature novel than White City Blue, which I also enjoyed, but this one has far more depth. I look forward to seeing it on A level syllabi in years to come... bitter sweet (6/6 people found this helpful)The title and book cover don't do justice to what is inside. Nor do some of Tim Lott's previous books - especially White City Blue which was very readable but nothing special. Need Lotta Lott! (2/4 people found this helpful)Both this and Lott's White City Blue are absolutely superb. In a different life I could have read both in one sitting: bitter, funny, sarcastic, black, melancholy and observationally acute - something we English love and do so well. For me, a late 40's something, both Rumours for the 80's and WCB for the 70's and 90's took me back to times past so clearly, so perceptively, so endearingly - I was lost in a time warp. Hornby is dead - long live the new king - Lott. Need a new one..............soon Tim! Similar ProductsThe Scent of Dried Roses The Seymour Tapes White City Blue The Love Secrets of Don Juan Fearless CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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