The sensational final instalment in comic legend Sue Townsend''s hilarious and iconic Adrian Mole series
''Effortlessly hilarious. Brilliant satire and tragedy'' Times
''My comfort read. The best diaries ever written - with apologies to Samuel Pepys, Bridget Jones and me'' ADAM KAY
Read as Adrian continues to struggle with his love life, endures a painfully awkward school play and contemplates the unsettling prospect of applying genital poultice . . .
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Sunday 1st July
NO SMOKING DAY. A momentous day! Smoking in a public place or place of work is forbidden in England. Though if you are a prisoner, an MP or a member of the Royal Family you are exempt.
Adrian Mole is thirty-nine and a quarter. He lives in the country in a semi-detached converted pigsty with his wife Daisy and their daughter. His parents George and Pauline live in the adjoining pigsty. But all is not well.
The secondhand bookshop in which Adrian works is threatened with closure. The spark has fizzled out of his marriage. His mother is threatening to write her autobiography (A Girl Called Shit). And Adrian''s nightly trips to the lavatory have become alarmingly frequent . . .
This laugh-out-loud final chapter in Adrian''s story will have you hooked from the first page as you discover what he gets up to next.
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''A tour de force by a comic genius and if it isn''t the best book published this year, I''ll eat my bookshelf'' Daily Mail, Books of the Year
''Hilarious. Comic gold'' Sunday Times
''The funniest person in the world'' Caitlin Moran
Industry Reviews
An exquisite social comedy Daily Telegraph In this book the comedy is all the sharper, and more poignant, for its melancholy contrasts, the emotional danger and the sense that time is always running out. The Guardian Like Evelyn Waugh's Captain Grimes, Adrian is 'one of the immortals' and the series of his diaries the comic masterpiece of our time The Scotsman Sue Townsend has always had an unflinching sense of humour - the more incongruously awful the situation, the more she can make us laugh...this is a seriously lovely book. Sunday Times This hilarious and poignant tale of Adrian Mole's early middle age reaffirms that Sue Townsend has created 'one of the great comic characters of our time' The Scotsman