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A Working Title I Want to Change - by Saul Leslie (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Explores the bleach-scented, dizzyingly over-lit world of a supermarket's aisles, as austerity makes everyone within the store's walls poorer.
- About the Author: Saul Leslie is a writer and academic in Liverpool.
- 250 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Literary
Description
Book Synopsis
Explores the bleach-scented, dizzyingly over-lit world of a supermarket's aisles, as austerity makes everyone within the store's walls poorer.
In the labyrinth of Tesco's flagship supermarket, precariously employed workers search for dignity at the margins of late-capitalist London, while a nameless narrator cycles through the discarded nametags of sacked colleagues. Gradually absorbing their stories, he drifts from shifts at the superstore to temporary accommodation, as imminent homelessness threatens his intellectual hopes. Petty triumphs, quiet humiliations, and fleeting acts of kindness become markers of resistance to the wider collapse beyond the store's walls.
A Working Title I Want to Change explores the dizzyingly over-lit world of austerity Britain, revealing consumerism's rituals and illusions in all their comedy and menace.
Review Quotes
"Saul Leslie has divined the deflating end point of Bataille's unproductive expenditure in the abandoned shopping trolley, stuck in the mire halfway between damp valediction and the base matter of bureaucratic Albion. A sacred conspiracy of consumer ennui, scried in his mordant sweep round its British aisles."
- Sophie Sleigh-Johnson, author of Code: Damp
"Full of revealing observations about metropolitan life in the early twenty-first century, it is written in exuberant, richly enjoyable prose."
- Matthew Beaumont, author of Nightwalking: A Nocturnal History of London
"Lovely, clever, both incredibly silly at points and also deadly, heartbreakingly serious."
- Sheila Liming, author of Hanging Out: The Radical Power of Killing Time
"Finally: the great supermarket novel. A wickedly sharp tale of work and life under modern capitalism that will resonate with anyone who has ever worked on the tills."
- Dan Evans, author of A Nation of Shopkeepers
"Imagine Charles Bukowski rewritten by John Milton and James Joyce for a post-pop cultural age. This is exciting, fearsomely brilliant and witty writing -- a stunning and engrossing fictional debut, a brilliant head-rush -- and it never gives in."
- Philip Hoare, author of William Blake and the Sea Monsters of Love
About the Author
Saul Leslie is a writer and academic in Liverpool. He teaches literature and creative writing at the University of Liverpool and Hope University. His fiction has been published by Bloomsbury and Liverpool University Press, and his remarks about disability and literature have appeared in the Times Literary Supplement, The Conversation, and The Poetry Review. His academic research on disability and employment was instrumental in influencing policy that brought about the British Sign Language Act in 2022. In addition to his PhD research on disability and the workplace, he also works with Penguin-Random House as an editor of disabled writers' memoirs and novels.