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Disgusted of London - A.L. Kennedy's Serious Sweet reviewed

Their endless sweary tirades are exhausting A.L. Kennedy’s frustrated protagonists — and also (after 500 pages) her readers

14 May 2016

9:00 AM

14 May 2016

9:00 AM

Serious Sweet A.L. Kennedy

Cape, pp.515, £17.99, ISBN: 9780224098441

Twenty-four long hours, two lonely people, one city in decline. This is the premise of A.L. Kennedy’s new novel Serious Sweet, a work full of anger at what has happened to London since the Thatcher revolution and concern for the city’s isolated, impotent inhabitants. Kennedy’s representative Londoners are Jon, a divorced and fusty civil servant, a ‘passed over man’ plagued by failure, and Meg, a bankrupt accountant and recovering alcoholic who jokes at her own expense that she is ‘Fine: Fucked-up Insecure Neurotic and Emotional’.

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Available from the Spectator Bookshop, £14.99. Tel: 08430 600033. Kate Webb is working on a collection of essays about the politics of bohemia.

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