Theft
North v South, old v young, woman v man, rich v poor: love, envy and revenge in divided Britain
What I did to them was terrible, but you have to understand the context. This was London, 2016...
Bohemia is history. Paul has awoken to the fact that he will always be better known for reviewing haircuts than for his literary journalism. He is about to be kicked out of his cheap flat in east London and his sister has gone missing after an argument about what to do with the house where they grew up. Now that their mother is dead this is the last link they have to the declining town on the north-west coast where they grew up.
Enter Emily Nardini, a cult author, who – after granting Paul a rare interview – receives him into her surprisingly grand home. Paul is immediately intrigued: by Emily and her fictions, by her vexingly famous and successful partner Andrew (too old for her by half), and later by Andrew's daughter Sophie, a journalist whose sexed-up vision of the revolution has gone viral. Increasingly obsessed, relationships under strain, Paul travels up and down, north and south, torn between the town he thought he had escaped and the city that threatens to chew him up.
With heart, bite and humour, Luke Brown leads the reader beyond easy partisanism and into much trickier terrain. Straddling the fissures within a man and his country, riven by envy, wealth, ownership, entitlement, and loss, Theft is an exhilarating howl of a novel.
'An emotionally complex story of grief, desire, and Brexit...With bleak humor and sharp details, Brown memorably connects the personal and the political.' — Booklist
'Brown's novel captures the sun-soaked sexiness of the city...and the hazy drug that is desire better than anything I have read in years.' — The Guardian
Luke Brown grew up in a former fishing town on the coast of Lancashire, England. He works as a book editor and is a lecturer at the University of Manchester. He writes regularly for the Financial Times; and sometimes for the TLS, London Review of Books and New Statesman. His debut novel My Biggest Lie was published in 2014, and his fiction has appeared in The White Review.