The Fowler Family Business

By Jonathan Meades

‘One of the funniest and truest writers we have. No one understands England better than Meades.’ Stephen Fry

An inventively nasty, gruesomely comic paean to the sylvan heights of Forest Hill and Upper Norwood, a warped map of the death trade’s quotidian strangeness.

Henry Fowler was twice, long ago, runner-up in the Oil Fuels Guild-sponsored Young Funeral Director of the Year competition. His intense loyalties are to his parents, to his wife and children, to the family firm and the trade it practises, to his native south-east London and to his best friend Curly, traffic wonk and surviving brother of his former best friend who fell to his death at Norwood Junction. Well into middle age, and Henry’s life is running smoothly as he always hoped it would. But then: his wife’s tennis partner, a celebrity florist and BBC2 star is accidentally beheaded by his electric hedgecutter while crimping a three metre high topiary poodle; Curly, newly married and eager for a child is diagnosed as suffering ‘waterworks problems’; and Henry, suddenly doubtful of his wife’s fidelity, cuts a lock of his sleeping daughter’s hair. The foundations of a world, a family and an identity begin to rock.

Format: ebook
Release Date: 11 Apr 2013
Pages: None
ISBN: 978-0-00-739692-4
Jonathan Meades is the author of Filthy English, Peter Knows What Dick Likes and Pompey. He has written and performed in some twenty-five TV films on such subjects as the utopian avoidance of right angles, vertigo\'s lure, beer and Birmingham\'s appeal. Jonathan Meades contributed a weekly column about restaurants to The Times from 1986-2002.

‘Brilliant. Meades is a genius at provoking horrid laughter. However, there is a lot more to him than that. Besides lifting the lid on the casket racket, The ‘Fowler Family Business’ reflects his passion for food, architecture and television.’ Evening Standard‘The Fowler Family Business’ is as black as black comedy can be, but comedy it remains. Praise be that this is the first installment in a projected Henry Fowler trilogy. Few novels are as lively as this novel about death.’ Christopher Bray, The Mail on Sunday -