Description
What was the essence of the babyboomers? Were they just the luckiest and most privileged generation ever to walk the earth? For they certainly were that, enjoying everything from unheard-of security and unprecedented freedoms to an old age which for many ended in riches, leaving them the object of angry resentment from the generations who followed and had a harder path through life. Yet when they started out, the babyboomers also had purpose: they wanted to make the world a better place – at least, the best of them did. Gideon Horrocks and Graham Blenkinsop were two such, radical students together at the end of the sixties: Horrocks the Marxist revolutionary and Blenkinsop the underground chemist manufacturing that most archetypal of babyboomer hallucinogens, LSD. But when, a decade after university, the two men reunite to make LSD on a scale big enough to flood all of Europe, in an isolated old house on the Lancashire moors, Horrocks has lost his radical beliefs, and uses his share of the money that rolls in to start a fashionable restaurant, which becomes the most glamorous and successful restaurant in the North of England.
On New Year’s Eve 1980, Horrocks is giving a party in a wine bar to celebrate his success when he drunkenly intervenes in a police arrest and is himself arrested for obstruction. He resolves to take revenge on the young officer who detains him, WPC Claire Sowerby, a probationary member of the local drug squad – yet instead, he falls in love with her. Unknown to him, however, the squad of which Claire Sowerby is a member is on his trail, and it is under these circumstances that they come together, two people who have both been damaged and shaped by great unhappiness in their pasts, and who, wholly unexpectedly, find in each other the possibility of a happy future. But circumstances are closing in...
Set in the early years of Thatcher’s Britain, in the industrial Lancashire of the nineteen-eighties with unemployment rapidly rising, The Man On The Mountain tells two gripping and interlocking stories – one about the fate of the most extraordinary of generations, and the other about the power of love to reopen even the most tightly closed of human hearts.
Michael McCarthy has won numerous awards for his environmental journalism as the Environment Correspondent of The Times and the longstanding Environment Editor of The Independent. His book The Moth Snowstorm – Nature and Joy (2015) was shortlisted for the Wainwright Prize, Britain’s premier nature writing award, and also for the Richard Jefferies prize. His novel Fergus The Silent (2022) won the 2023 Creative Writing Prize of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, with the chairman of the judges describing it as “wonderful.” This is his second novel.
Details
Publisher - YouCaxton Publications
Language - English
Perfect Bound
Contributors
By author
Michael McCarthy
Published Date - 2025-06-01
ISBN - 9781915972729
Dimensions - 21.6 x 14 x 1.8 cm
Page Count - 323
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