âThe most screamingly funny living writerâ Mail on Sunday
From the bestselling and award-winning author of Ma'am Darling and One Two Three Four, a selection of Craig Brown's finest writing collected together for the first time.
Haywire presents a survival guide to the 21st century.
The acclaimed biographer of Princess Margaret and The Beatles considers such diverse topics as gloves, outer space, the Marx Brothers, Richard Dawkins, Hitlerâs hair, John Stonehouse, Katie Price, tongue-twisters, Bruce Springsteen, Harry and Meghan, Stanley Spencer, Brian Epstein, Downton Abbey, Sigmund Freud and Karl Lagerfeldâs cat.
With the full battery of the humourist's armoury â clerihews, tongue twisters, whimsy, parody, farce, satire, social observation, nonsense â Brown skewers the fads and delusions of the contemporary world.
Reviews
âThe most screamingly funny living writerâ Barry Humphries, Mail on Sunday
âThe greatest satirist since Max Beerbohmâ Elaine Showalter Guardian
âCraig Brown's humour will outlive his victims. His journalism is one of the few compensations for being British nowâ David Sexton, Sunday Telegraph
âA genius ⌠in every instance, the skill of the parodist dwarfs any achievement attributable to his subjectâ Auberon Waugh, Daily Telegraph
âHe is the comic writer the rest of us admire from afar, and envy beyond the bounds of reason. How does he do it?â Markus Berkmann, Spectator
âBritainâs wittiest satiristâ The Times
â[Craig Brown] has an acutely attuned comic ear, an unmatched eye for spotting the absurdities of human behaviour and a bloodhound-grade nose for sniffing out phoniness and pretensionâ Mail On Sunday
About the author
Craig Brownâs last book, One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Time won the 2020 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction. His previous book, Maâam Darling: 99 Glimpses of Princess Margaret won the James Tait Black Prize for Biography and the South Bank Sky Arts Award for Literature, and was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the US. His first article appeared in the New Statesman in 1978. Since then, he has written for many newspapers and magazines, including the Guardian, the Daily Mail, the New York Times and the Spectator. He has been writing the parodic celebrity diary for Private Eye for over thirty years. He lives in Aldeburgh, Suffolk with his wife Frances Welch; they have two children and a grandchild.
âThe most screamingly funny living writerâ Mail on Sunday
From the bestselling and award-winning author of Ma'am Darling and One Two Three Four, a selection of Craig Brown's finest writing collected together for the first time.
Haywire presents a survival guide to the 21st century.
The acclaimed biographer of Princess Margaret and The Beatles considers such diverse topics as gloves, outer space, the Marx Brothers, Richard Dawkins, Hitlerâs hair, John Stonehouse, Katie Price, tongue-twisters, Bruce Springsteen, Harry and Meghan, Stanley Spencer, Brian Epstein, Downton Abbey, Sigmund Freud and Karl Lagerfeldâs cat.
With the full battery of the humourist's armoury â clerihews, tongue twisters, whimsy, parody, farce, satire, social observation, nonsense â Brown skewers the fads and delusions of the contemporary world.
Reviews
âThe most screamingly funny living writerâ Barry Humphries, Mail on Sunday
âThe greatest satirist since Max Beerbohmâ Elaine Showalter Guardian
âCraig Brown's humour will outlive his victims. His journalism is one of the few compensations for being British nowâ David Sexton, Sunday Telegraph
âA genius ⌠in every instance, the skill of the parodist dwarfs any achievement attributable to his subjectâ Auberon Waugh, Daily Telegraph
âHe is the comic writer the rest of us admire from afar, and envy beyond the bounds of reason. How does he do it?â Markus Berkmann, Spectator
âBritainâs wittiest satiristâ The Times
â[Craig Brown] has an acutely attuned comic ear, an unmatched eye for spotting the absurdities of human behaviour and a bloodhound-grade nose for sniffing out phoniness and pretensionâ Mail On Sunday
About the author
Craig Brownâs last book, One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Time won the 2020 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction. His previous book, Maâam Darling: 99 Glimpses of Princess Margaret won the James Tait Black Prize for Biography and the South Bank Sky Arts Award for Literature, and was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the US. His first article appeared in the New Statesman in 1978. Since then, he has written for many newspapers and magazines, including the Guardian, the Daily Mail, the New York Times and the Spectator. He has been writing the parodic celebrity diary for Private Eye for over thirty years. He lives in Aldeburgh, Suffolk with his wife Frances Welch; they have two children and a grandchild.