170076 men and 71515 women to

date in the UK 

Username:    Password:
Flirtbox UK 

Favourites 

Matches 

bookcorner



Wilt in Nowhere

Tom Sharpe



Wilt in NowhereOne of the most impressive things about Wilt in Nowhere is that Tom Sharpe manages to go on being outrageous and funny after such a long career--after all, what does a satirist do when real world lifestyles and events exceed his wildest earlier inventions? The answer is, of course, that he just goes on making wonderful things up--this is the first novel about his quietly stroppy, lazy-as-hell college lecturer hero Wilt for 20 years, and Wilt is as funny in an era of e-mail and NHS cuts as he was back then.

There is also a gentle nostalgia in some of the writing here. Wilt's hike through the English countryside in early chapters has pastoral charm in patches as well as a sarcastic sense of rural dereliction. Sharpe's sense of rural American life is rather more broad-brush, but the damage inflicted on an obnoxious millionaire by Wilt's four terrifying daughters shows a sense of just how power works.

This is a gentler book than some of Sharpe's satires, but he still has all of his bitter irony intact; this is not the book of someone who has mellowed in later life. --Roz Kaveney





Members who also like the book «Wilt in Nowhere»

  • daveydave, 41
  • tallnfunnny, 26
  • More books of Tom Sharpe

  • Ancestral Vices
  • Vintage Stuff
  • Wilt
  • The Wilt Alternative
  • Wilt in Nowhere
  • Wilt on High
  • Porterhouse Blue
  • Indecent Exposure
  • The Throwback
  • Riotous Assembly
  • The Midden
  • The Great Pursuit
  • Grantchester Grind
  • Blott on the Landscape
  •