Winner of the 1999 Whitbread First Novel Award
âBeautiful and brilliantâ Tony Parsons
Estate agent Frankie Blue is known on his home turf â White City, Shepherdâs Bush â as âFrank the Fibâ. Heâs a liar â but one who always tries to tell the truth. Frankie has been friends with Diamond Tony, a hairdresser, Colin, a computer nerd, and Nodge, a cabbie, since schooldays.
Now they are thirty and trying to live the same life as they did then â drinking, girls, banter, football. Then comes Frankieâs Great Betrayal â Veronica, and marriage, his ticket to a bigger, better grown-up world. From the moment he tells his mates, the whole patchwork of their friendships begins to collapse â revealing the sad, shocking but often hilarious truths that lie underneath.
âCaustically funny and sometimes very affecting ⊠with sardonic wit and a kind of tough tenderness, Lott portrays people growing up, growing apart or growing togetherâ Sunday Times
âMordantly funny ⊠Observations are vivid, the dialogue crisp and, crucially, the characters are sympatheticâ Tatler