
The Last Roundhead
by Jemahl Evans
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Pub Date 1 Oct 2015 | Archive Date 18 Oct 2017
Holland House | Caerus
Description
A Note From the Publisher
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Born in Bradford Upon Avon to nomadic Welsh school teachers; Jemahl was brought up in a West Wales mining village during the 70s and 80s. He has pursued a lifelong passion for history, inspired by his grandfather’s stories and legends. Jemahl was educated in Christ College Brecon, St Mary’s University College (Strawberry Hill), and U.W.E. Bristol.
Jemahl graduated with an MA in History, focussing on poetry and propaganda during the Wars of the Roses, and then worked for IBM in London. At the turn of the millennium, he left the grind of the office and spent a couple of years travelling and working abroad. After time spent in India, Australia, and South East Asia he returned to Britain and took up a teaching post in West London in 2005. He left his role as Head of Year in the Heathland School in 2010, and returned to Wales citing hiraeth.
He started writing The Last Roundhead in 2013 and early revisions won awards on the British Arts Council site YouWriteOn and Harper Collins Authonomy. His interest in the English Civil War was sparked as a child, after reading Simon by Rosemary Sutcliffe, which is probably why his sympathies lie with Parliament!
The research for the novel meant visiting many of the places mentioned. Jemahl claims this was a great experience when it was a pub in Oxford or alongside the Thames, but he questioned his sanity standing on the Edgehill escarpment on a cold November morning. The Last Roundhead is the first in a planned series set during the most tumultuous age in British History.
Jemahl now spends his time teaching, reading history, listening to the Delta Blues, walking his border collie, and whining on Twitter about the government. He has spent some time practising the authorial pose for photographs.
Advance Praise
Antonia Senior, The Times,
-In another civil war, a hero who owes much to the legendary Flashman is drinking and whoring his way through the English Civil War. Sir Blandford Candy, an aged roué, recounts his youthful adventures in The Last Roundhead. After the unfortunate seduction of his brother’s wife, Sir Blandford finds himself embroiled in the violence erupting between king and parliament. A roundhead by accident, rather than by conviction, he becomes a scout, or spy, in the service of the parliamentarian army, uncovering royalist plots and avoiding his irascible, cavalier brothers.
“Sugar” Candy — he earns this monicker because of his pretty face and success with ladies — is an entertaining and witty guide to the political intrigues of the early Civil War. The plot can feel episodic, rather than entirely coherent, but the research is impeccable and the writing full of verve.
Michael Jecks, author of Blood in the Sand
-This is, frankly, glorious. The story is a romp that does not take itself too seriously [...] It is thoroughly delightful, and I recommend it to all who enjoy Flashman, Tom Jones and similar period romps. The great thing is, I think I learned more about the English Civil War from this book than any other I ve read and it was all enjoyable!
Historical Novel Society
-It is great fun and a rollicking good read, while Candy lives an exceptionally and, somewhat unlikely, charmed life in surviving the perils and vicissitudes of the war. The language is ribald and entirely immersed in the culture and conventions of crude 17th-century England. Footnotes and endnotes provided by the editor give the historical detail and context of the narrative intended as an accurate accompanying scholarly apparatus. The story is similar in style to the parodies by Robert Nye, written with an appropriate zest and dash.
David Luckhardt (English Civil War Society of America)
-I thoroughly enjoyed this romp through the English Civil Way by Jemahl Evans. I know quite a lot about the history of the conflict, which improved the experience. Reminiscent of the Flashman series in tone and footnoted structure, Evans also rewards those who have studied the period with a wealth of gritty detail and practical soldiering. Read a trade paperback review copy sent to me from the UK.
Brian Keaney, Fellow of the Royal Literary Fund, award-winning author.
-
The English Civil War is so often portrayed as a conflict between the royalists
and the puritans that one forgets it began as a conflict between the king and
parliament. So it is interesting to read a novel set during this initial period
before the whole edifice of English society had been overturned but when,
nevertheless, structures were beginning to crumble.
Cleverly dovetailed into history, with its
spurious but convincing provenance and its cast of real and invented
characters, The Last Roundhead is the story of Blandford Candy, who is obliged
to join the parliamentary army to avoid a scandal at home.
It's a period of political and military
uncertainty. Both sides are at war but both sides are also involved in a
protracted series of negotiations. Many of the parliamentarians still feel a
good deal of loyalty towards their king and although attitudes are hardening ,
there is still room for sympathies to change. It is in this environment that
Blandford finds his true vocation. He becomes a Scout, a spy for the
parliamentary party with a licence to unravel the enemy's machinations.
To his own surprise, he proves successful at
espionage but everything else in his life goes awry. His friends are killed; he
loses the woman he loves; and his two brothers, who have joined the royalist
party, are determined to see him dead. Finally, he becomes the target of an a determined
assassination plot.
Laced with disenchantment at the incompetence of
powerful men, the novel pulls off that difficult trick of seeming entirely
authentic while simultaneously resonating with a contemporary sensibility. When
I got to the end, I immediately wanted to go back to the history books and find
out more about the characters who flitted in and out of its pages.
James Kemp, English Civil War Society
-The
best historical fiction I have read in years!
This is the tale of Blandford Candy, the last living roundhead in 1719 when he
wrote his memoirs. In the long hot summer of 1642 he is forced to leave home
because his sister has discovered that he is having an affair with his eldest
brother's wife to be. He rides up to London in search of fame and fortune, just
in time to be enlisted in his uncle's Regiment. It is by far the best
historical fiction that I have read since I finished reading the Flashman
papers.
Laid out in the style of the Flashman papers, Candy's story is very well
researched and thoroughly end noted. The history is part of the story and
doesn't get in the way, it all makes sense without reading the end notes
(although if you do you will learn about mid seventeenth century England).
Blandford Candy is not Flashman, his character is wholly different. For a start
he lacks the bully boy swagger and cowardice of Flashman, although like
Flashman he often gets involved in things that he would not have done
otherwise, and he's lead by lust more than brains. He does have brains though,
and they get him out of some of the scrapes along with a measure of luck.
Candy is an unreliable narrator from a period where truth and accuracy were
seen as perspectives rather than necessities in journalism. The chapters in the
book are interspersed with correspondence and news pamphlets from the time,
giving us other perspectives than just Candy's. Like many of his time he is
sophisticated in his cynicism of the printed material.
He is the third son of a middling family. Candy has been brought up as a
gentleman, but also has an understanding that there will be no inheritance for
him. The social position leads him falling naturally into being a young officer
in his uncle Samuel Luke's cavalry troop. This takes him to Edgehill, where his
flamboyant red hat marks him out for special attention in the melee with Prince
Rupert's cavalry. Barely surviving the initial clash he recovers his composure
and is able to participate later in the breaking of the King's infantry, where he
kills a red-headed ensign and takes the colour.
Back in London he becomes one of the 24 scouts when Parliament appoints Samuel
Luke as Scoutmaster General. This leads to a whole load of skulduggery and
plotting as well as a raid to uncover the printing press producing pamphlets
for the royalists in London. He also goes to Oxford over the winter with the
peace commissioners where he meets his middle brother, recently knighted by the
King for loyal service. There's a whole load of hidden plot here that develops
through the rest of the story.
We see Blandford Candy being transformed from an innocent young man driven more
by libido than anything else into a hardened warrior, confirmed roundhead and
cynical agent for Parliament. He also develops close friendships with the other
scouts, and there are moments of tragedy when some of them die, whether from
disease or enemy action. There's a lot of promise for more in the book too,
references to other events and interesting characters, including Rochester. I certainly
hope that there are as least as many of these as there were of the Flashman
papers.
The book is available for pre-order, and is on general release from 1 August.
Jemahl Evans kindly sent me an advanced reading copy knowing that I was a book
reviewer and a member of the English Civil War Society. The Last Roundhead has
exceeded my expectations and I would thoroughly recommend it to anyone that
enjoys history, thrillers, spy stories or mysteries, because it has all of
these wrapped in together.
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781909374645 |
PRICE | £9.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 336 |
Links
Featured Reviews

What I know of the Civil War is that it was between the King and Cromwell, or more exact, Parliament. Everything that went deeper than that was a new information to me. What I imagined was that extravagant people were for the King and the strict Puritans were for Cromwell. This book corrected my thinking because Blandford Candy is nothing like the strict Puritans I have expected on the side of the Parliament. His love for dresses and extravagance made him an interesting character.
He is an unlikely 'hero' but no one can say that he is not aware of his many faults. Not all, maybe, but most of them. It helps that he is telling the story of his youth, years after it happened. He still seems to remember the details vividly though.
The story is then told mainly from his perspective, but there are intersections of his brothers' letters to their sister or Royalist propaganda. The story of brothers show in this particular family what happened to many of them - they became divided because of their sympathies. It is the story of any civil war, where neighbours become enemies and families are torn apart.