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The biography of JL Carr, written by Byron Rogers

 

JL Carr was the most English of Englishmen: a man who spent most of his working life in the middle of Middle England, as headmaster of a Northamptonshire school, an enthusiastic campaigner for the conservation of country churches. But he was also the author of half a dozen of the quirkiest, most comic novels in English and a publisher (from his own back bedroom in Kettering) of some of the most eccentric, collectable - and smallest - books ever printed.

 

His masterpiece, A Month in the Country, the moving story of a First World War survivor, won the Guardian Fiction Award and was made into a film starring Kenneth Branagh and Colin Firth; How Steeple Sinderby Wanderers Won the FA Cup is acknowledged as the funniest novel ever written about football, and The Harpole Report as the best novel about a school. Meanwhile Carr's own self-published Dictionary of Extra-Ordinary Cricketers is a tiny classic with an enormous cult reputation.

 

But their author was an elusive person - someone different to everyone who met him. Now, Byron Rogers, who knew him well, tells for the first time the full story of JL Carr's life, a tale both surprising and extraordinarily varied, from war service on a West African flying boat base to a strange interlude teaching in the heart of South Dakota. It reveals a quixotic, civic-minded and thoroughly decent man, who would hold arithmetic races on sports day, paved his garden with the printing plates from his hand-drawn maps, and led his schoolchildren through the streets of Kettering to hymn the beauty of the cherry trees - and, above all, a novelist whose fiction is more thoroughly autobiographical than anyone has hitherto realised.

 

The Last Englishman is more than the fascinating life of a truly unique individual: it is a frequently comic and always touching portrait of the best kind of Englishness.

The Last Englishman - the life of JL Carr - Seconds

£4.00Price
  • Publication Essentials

    Quality hardback edition, published by Aurum Press. Byron Rogers writes for the Sunday Telegraph, Guardian and Saga magazine. His previous books, An Audience with an Elephant and The Green Lane to Nowhere are also published by Aurum. He lives in Northamptonshire.
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