Love Under Lockdown is the sequel to About Time, which the Jewish Chronicle described as 'well-observed, humane and very funny.'
Love Under Lockdown is the sequel to About Time, which the Jewish Chronicle described as 'well-observed, humane and very funny.'
"Very funny and original . . . I read it in one evening and laughed much of the time" SALLY EMERSON
"Consistently intelligent" FINANCIAL TIMES"This beautifully observed tableau of an increasingly feverish English can be read in one enjoyable gulp" COUNTRY LIFEBill and Pete, best friends since school, are approaching 70 and now retired, but still meet regularly to chew the fat about sport, politics, their stagnant love lives, mutual friends and, increasingly, Bill's fractious relationship with his rebellious son Ivan.Spanning the four years from the Brexit Referendum to the end of the first Coronavirus lockdown, we watch these characters, last seen in About Time, stumble their way through chaos, mistrust, generational differences and blossoming relationships, finding new life and unexpected happiness in uncertain times.“Well-observed, humane, and very funny. -- Alun David , Jewish Chronicle”
'Well-observed, humane, and very funny.'
-- Alun David The Jewish Chronicle'Finely observed, often tantalizing novel...Estorick writes with wry, elegant ease. Sophisticated, apparently feather-light repartee has elusive, sinister undercurrents.'
-- Philippa Freshman The Jewish Chronicle'Full of incidental insights...consistently intelligent.'
-- Martin Seymour-Smith Financial Times'A sharp satirist of class and family. He's adept at the nuances of domestic oppression, the bickering, the transmission of skewed hopes and frustrated affections across the years...arrestingly grotesque and finely compelling...its power lies mainly in its inconsequentiality...Estorick has an acute eye and ear and he'll certainly be heard from as a novelist again.'
-- Valentine Cunningham The Observer'I read it again, and again with pleasure and admiration. It's a very funny novel... The throw away wit is an ongoing bonus; the dialogue crackles; I almost think you've invented something - the short four- or five-line conversations standing like islands in the story, half a dozen comments and retorts like little explosions - nothing wasted, every word a neat and sometimes savage barb. And all funny in spite of the pain.'
-- Maurice Gee, winner of the James Tate Black Prize for PlumbMichael Estorick is the author of eight novels and has written for publications including The Independent and The Tablet. He is Chairman of the Trustees of the Estorick Collection.
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