Small bomb at Dimperly

Lissa Evans

£18.99

In stock

It’s 1945, there’s a brand-new Labour government, and Valentine Vere-Thissett, aged 23, is returning home from an undistinguished war, spent in the ranks. But following the death of his heroic older brother, and to his horror, Valentine is now Sir Valentine, seventh Baronet and extremely reluctant heir to Dimperly Manor, a gigantic liability, devoid of income, sodden with debt and half-filled with stuffed animals and dependent relatives – the latter intent on clinging to an impossibly outdated way of life. Despite Valentine’s efforts, it takes an outsider to finally work out that Dimperly can only be saved when the inhabitants accept that the world has changed irrevocably, and that they must make at least a tiny attempt to change with it.

ISBN: 9780857528292 Category:

Description

‘So incredibly assured and affecting. I loved the world and the characters so much and it just seemed like the perfect novel to be read in such dark times. Joy and love found in the ruins, the hope after the horrors, simply gorgeous – a true balm’ Graham Norton
‘Generous, touching and romantic’ Clare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures
‘Lissa Evans is a wonderful writer’ Jojo Moyes
‘Funny, poignant, perfect’ Daisy Goodwin, author of My Last Duchess
‘An irresistible novel which combines a crumbling once-grand house, bumbling aristos clinging to the pre-war past, and the magnificent Zena Baxter. This is Lissa Evans at the peak of her mighty powers’ India Knight, bestselling author of My Life on a Plate
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It’s 1945, and Corporal Valentine Vere-Thissett, aged 23, is on his way home. But ‘home’ is Dimperley, built in the 1500s, vast and dilapidated, up to its eaves in debt and half-full of fly-blown taxidermy and dependent relatives, the latter clinging to a way of life that has gone forever. And worst of all – following the death of his heroic older brother – Valentine is now Sir Valentine, and is responsible for the whole bloody place.

To Valentine, it’s a millstone; to Zena Baxter, who has never really had a home before being evacuated there with her small daughter, it’s a place of wonder and sentiment, somewhere that she can’t bear to leave. But Zena has been living with a secret, and the end of the war means she has to face a reckoning of her own?

Funny, sharp and touching, Small Bomb at Dimperley is both a love story and a bittersweet portrait of an era of profound loss, and renewal.
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More Praise for Small Bomb at Dimperley

‘Sharp, witty and warm. Press it on friends’ Lev Parikian
‘Brilliantly funny, moving and joyous’ Catherine Johnson
‘A glorious read. I laughed many times rejoicing in the wit, cleverness and humanity’ Elizabeth Buchan
‘Loaded with period detail, primed with characters you feel you’ve known for years, Small Bomb at Dimperley explodes comically, lovingly and very slightly wistfully into absolute delight’ Hilary McKay
‘Deeply enjoyable, lovable and poignant. Her characters are created with such affection and care it makes you wish you could step into the story and become one of them’ Miranda France

Additional information

Weight 0.5 kg
Dimensions 22.2 × 13.8 × 4 cm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Hardback

Pages

320

Language

English

Edition

Hardback original

Dewey

823.92 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K

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