William is a lonely young man on the loose in the late 1960s. A disastrous appearance as a stand-up comic in a pub called The Man In the Moon is only the start of his adventures, in which he consorts with theatrical types, frenzied advertising men and accident-prone lodgers.
WilliamтАЩs exploits lead him eventually to the consulting rooms of a Harley Street psychiatrist, where his delusions that he is a comic genius can finally be laid bare.
Andrew BarrowтАЩs second тАУ and so far last тАУ novel, first published in 1996, is a hilariously bittersweet comedy that follows in the footsteps of last yearтАЩs sensational reissue of The Tap Dancer, which drew praise from Alan Bennett (тАШmy favourite novelтАЩ), Craig Brown (тАШsublime comedyтАЩ) and India Knight (тАШhilariously funnyтАЩ).
Andrew Barrow (b.1945) is a writer and journalist, a regularly contributor to the pages of the Independent, the Daily Telegraph and the Spectator. He is the author of two novels, The Tap Dancer and The Man in the Moon, and the double biography, Quentin and Philip, published by Picador. He lives in London.