Full Personal Service

Paperback

Main Details

Title Full Personal Service
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Charles Spencer
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback
Pages:210
Dimensions(mm): Height 203,Width 133
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Crime and mystery
ISBN/Barcode 9781447292579
ClassificationsDewey:823.914
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Pan Macmillan
Imprint Macmillan Bello
Publication Date 29 January 2015
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Portly showbiz writer Will Benson has left Theatre World for the loucher but less life-threatening environment of soft-porn publishing. Now settled down in connubial bliss with the lovely Kim, life, it seems is a bed of roses. But certain aspects of his marriage necessitate the occasional visit to 'a tart with a heart' in Pimlico . . . and on one such visit Will finds the man ahead of him in the queue has overstepped the mark, to say the least, and Will once again is forced into the role of reluctant private eye . . .

Author Biography

Charles Spencer was on the staff of the Daily Telegraph for 25 years, for most of that time serving as its theatre critic. He was named Critic of the Year in the British Press Awards in 1999 and 2008. For ten years he also wrote a column about pop music for the Spectator and remains an unrepentant fan of the Grateful Dead to this day. After graduating with a degree in English from Oxford he began his career as a journalist on the Surrey Advertiserin 1976 and subsequently worked for the Evening Standard as a notably inefficient arts reporter, the theatrical trade paper The Stage, as a sub-editor and reviewer, and the late Robert Maxwell's London Daily News which went down with the loss of all hands in less than a year. After that debacle the Telegraph provided him with a welcome berth from which he retired in October 2014. During his 38 years as a journalist he reckons he wrote some 6000 reviews, ranging from Shakespeare to strip shows and everything in between. His three comic crime novels, I Nearly Died, Full Personal Service, and Under the Influence were partly inspired by his happy and often inebriated days on The Stage newspaper and first published between 1994 and 2000.

Reviews

Scruffy, chubby, disorganized Benson is a shrewd and amiable operator, the writing is from the self-deprecatingly witty school ... altogether highly entertaining The Times Hugely sympathetic and funny enough to make you laugh out loud Literary Review A real find as a novelist. His books are a fine example of that rare and special breed, the English comedy thriller. He writes witty and selfless prose ... full of magnificent cameos and vignettes Sunday Telegraph