- 2008 edition, 202 pages
- Published by Bloomsbury
- Paperback, Format A
- Very good condition, minor corner crease front cover
Dark Thoughts From The Middle Years. One morning in August 2007, William Leith wakes up and realises that something is wrong. He is not in a bet, but on an old mattress on the floor. He is not in a house. He is in his office. He is alone. He no longer lives with his little boy and the mother of his little boy. Mentally, he is at the end of his tether. Physically, he is fraying at the edges. Bits of him are falling apart.
But then again, so is everything else - the economy, the environment, and the very fabric of society.
With his customary dark and humorous mix of personal story and social commentary, Leith attempts to answer the question: is everything really falling apart? Or is it jus him? Are his cells really like tiny newspaper offices trying to print exactly the same story every day? And are they actually beginning to print different stories? Darker stories? Why does everything under the sun - or rather, everything includind the sun - have to die?
Leith examines the ageing process in humans and everything else as well, from the universe to the banking system. And he comes to realise that, even if he can't solve the problems of the world, he at least has a thorough understanding of failure.
Product is in stock.