Staying On Past the Terminus by Robert Douglas, Paperback, 9780755380299 | Buy online at The Nile
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Staying On Past the Terminus

Author: Robert Douglas  

Paperback

The second novel from the ever popular authour of Night Song of the Last Tram and Whose Turn for the Stairs?

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Summary

The second novel from the ever popular authour of Night Song of the Last Tram and Whose Turn for the Stairs?

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Description

Glasgow 1961.

It is ten years since we last visited the close at 18 Dalbeattie Street in Maryhill.

The stalwarts are still there...Ella, Drena, Rhea and 'Granny' Thomson (86).

Irma the German war bride speaks fluent Scots nowadays. Well, 'Fluent' if you were brought up in the same close as the Broons and Oor Wullie.

Glasgow's beloved trams still run on the Maryhill Road. But not for long. There will not be a tramcar left in Glasgow by the end of next year. The new tenant, Frank Galloway knows all about this - he's a driver. The other new arrival is Ruby Baxter who impresses no one with her attitude - as Granny Thomson says 'She's no better than she ought to be, that yin!'

Robert Douglas brings his usual blend of laughter and tears to this latest novel and his many fans will not be disappointed.

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About the Author

Robert Douglas retired, aged fifty-five, in 1994. He intended to paint, write short stories and lie about the house watching old films. A one-off article he wrote about six weeks spent with a condemned man in Bristol prison led to him being told 'You should write.'

So he did, and became a bestselling author. He hasn't painted for years.

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More on this Book

Glasgow 1961.It is ten years since we last visited the close at 18 Dalbeattie Street in Maryhill.The stalwarts are still there...Ella, Drena, Rhea and 'Granny' Thomson (86).Irma the German war bride speaks fluent Scots nowadays. Well, 'Fluent' if you were brought up in the same close as the Broons and Oor Wullie. Glasgow's beloved trams still run on the Maryhill Road. But not for long. There will not be a tramcar left in Glasgow by the end of next year. The new tenant, Frank Galloway knows all about this - he's a driver. The other new arrival is Ruby Baxter who impresses no one with her attitude - as Granny Thomson says 'She's no better than she ought to be, that yin!'Robert Douglas brings his usual blend of laughter and tears to this latest novel and his many fans will not be disappointed.

Read more

Product Details

Publisher
Headline Publishing Group | Hachette Books Scotland
Published
15th March 2012
Pages
416
ISBN
9780755380299

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$32.31
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