The All True Adventures (and Rare Education) of the Daredevil Daniel Bones

By Owen Booth

A gloriously moving and entertaining, picaresque debut novel, about a young man’s sentimental education in late 19th-Century Europe; inspired by a real historical figure: ‘Captain’ Paul Boyton – the ‘Fearless Frogman’

‘“But who among you might assist me on this adventure?” the Captain shouts.

And then the Captain’s eyes fall on me, as was his plan all along, and he points me out, making sure just so’s everyone can see.

“What about you, sir?”

“Me?”

“A strong young man to journey with me across the wild continent, to support me in my life-saving work, and take the name of his village to the farthest corners of civilisation – and paid a wage, of course!”

“Of course!” everyone shouts.’
 
The 1880s are drawing to a close, and 14(-maybe-15)-year-old Daniel Bones fears that the prospects for him and his younger brother Will may be dimming with the century.
 
For the motherless sons of a drunken blacksmith, life on a barren spit of land reaching into the Essex estuary holds little promise. Until one evening, from out of the water, there emerges the astonishing figure of Captain Clarke B: cigar-smoking daredevil adventurer, charlatan, casanova and inventor of the world-famous life-saving inflatable suit.
 
As the Captain embarks on his ramshackle promotional tour of Europe, Daniel is sucked into his wake, on an adventure that will carry him through the waterways of the continent, encountering Kings and Princesses, wealthy widows, irate husbands, anarchists, arms dealers and shadowy power-brokers. It’s an education beyond Dan’s wildest imaginings, across countries undergoing the convulsions of all kinds of revolution, and one that will open his eyes, and his heart.
 
But as he travels further into the dazzle of notoriety and the darkness that lies behind it, Dan’s promise to return and rescue Will seems ever harder to keep. For in the Captain’s world of smoke and mirrors it is all too easy to lose sight of who he is, or the man he ought to be…

Author: Owen Booth
Format: Hardback
Release Date: 09 Jul 2020
Pages: 352
ISBN: 978-0-00-828255-4
Owen Booth’s first book, What We’re Teaching Our Sons, was published by 4th Estate in 2018. His short stories have been published in The White Review, Gorse Magazine, The Moth, Hotel, 3AM Magazine and Best British Short Stories 2018, among others. He won the 2015 White Review Short Story Prize and was shortlisted for the 2019 McKitterick Prize. He lives in Walthamstow, North London with his family.

‘The narrative of an adolescent travelling by water with an older companion, undergoing trials and ordeals, encountering scoundrels and villains, with glimpses of society from high to low as they drift pass: it doesn’t take long before the flavour of this picaresque novel starts to seem hauntingly familiar … His companion, the charming cad Captain Clarke B, could equally have walked out of Mark Twain’s novel, and just like Huck and Jim, Dan and ‘the cap’ have a series of encounters that expose the cruelty of their world … Filled with extraordinary characters, the narrative has the same irresistible pull Dan feels in the rubber suit, as he’s swept into yet another escapade’ Spectator -

”'A rip roaring read, full of bold characters whose roguish behaviour leads them into enjoyable bother” - Daily Mail

”'A splendid, hilarious novel pulsating with adventure, romance, deception, princesses, anarchists and unexpected wildlife. Booth's brilliantly coloured, larger-than-life 19th century makes Jules Verne seem like old news.” - Will Wiles, author of Plume

”'A total escapist caper perfect for these times - think Patrick Leigh Fermor meeting Jules Verne in a complicated bisexual situation and you'll only be halfway there” - Luke Turner, author of Out of the Woods

”'Raucus and tender … Swashbuckling anarchic nineteenth-century derrings-do, with heart” - Eley Williams, author of The Liar’s Dictionary

”'a clatter of rich comedy, preposterous adventure and occasional stark brutality … not only funny - and it is very funny - but also strangely, desperately moving” - Richard Smyth, Literary Review