Last Summer in Cannes
by Edward Nicholas
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Pub Date 28 Mar 2023 | Archive Date 24 Apr 2023
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Description
Phil Fox is in his early eighties and enjoying his retirement lifestyle. He frequently entertains younger friends with his after-dinner tales of his experiences during his working life in London and Africa. His stories cover the period from early 1960s to 2021.
Constantly besieged by the regular requests of his after-dinner tales' listeners to write them all into a book, Phil ultimately succumbs, and chooses to write the book or part-biography during what he thinks may be his last summer in Cannes. He is accompanied by his much younger friend, Amy, who acts as his secretary in return for being shown and experiencing the many delights that Cannes and the Cote d’Azur has to offer.
When they unexpectedly meet a former colleague of Phil’s, it is revealed that Phil’s name has appeared in international police files - files such as those of the French National Police, New Scotland Yard C.I.D., Interpol, the C.I.A, and even the financial police of Italy and Monaco. What surprises them more is that Phil already knows...
A delightful, intriguing summer holiday or post-holiday read, offering some humour, an insight into 1960s London as experienced by the main character, and his further experiences during later years in North Africa. A biography, perhaps, disguised as fiction with an ending linked to the Coronavirus pandemic.
A Note From the Publisher
Marketing Plan
Unique story of a man writing his biography whilst holidaying in Cannes
Events in the book closely parallel the author's own life
Unique story of a man writing his biography whilst holidaying in Cannes
Events in the book closely parallel the author's own life
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781803134697 |
PRICE | £3.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 304 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Thank you very much for the opportunity to read, review, and acquire this book. I will be sure to share my full thoughts and review I just want to start by saying how unique and different this book is and I feel readers will feel the same way, it has that best go back in time vibe and I’m so curious to read abt our main character and his younger days especially his tie to the CIA. I feel this would make a great book club read or even a great movie! I could definitely see this being a Reese Witherspoon book pick! Can’t wait to have this as a beach read and I know others will 2!
Phil Fox has lived an interesting life so much so that he has more than enough stories to entertain his friends and associates. During a summer trip to Cannes, Phil, now in his eighties, is recognized by a former colleague, Georges, a retired engineer, with whom he had worked in Libya twenty-five years ago. George’s cousin Jean-Paul Vaillant, retired chief superintendent of the national police, is a bit wary of Phil, given Georges’s past skirmishes with shady characters. His suspicions about Phil are compounded when his sources reveal that Phil’s name appears in records with Interpol, though he has never been directly involved or accused of any criminal activity. Jean-Paul is also curious about how Phil can afford his apparent affluent lifestyle. As the narrative progresses, Phil shares anecdotes from his life, details about his work engagements, friends he made along the way and the people and events that impacted the trajectory of his life.
Last Summer in Cannes by Edward Nicholas is a well-written, slow-paced novel that follows Phil as he tells his story to his friend Amy, a former servicewoman who, like Phil, had served in the RAF and is helping him write the story of his life and travels. Phil regales his companions with stories from his life spanning the 1960s to the present day, from his time in the RAF and his life after working various jobs in shipping, engineering and construction among other areas and shuttling between England, Monaco, Morocco, Benghazi and wherever he could find lucrative employment opportunities. I did find Phil’s stories of his friendship with Dave really entertaining and I was initially engrossed in his experiences of his international employment, and Phil’s adventures and misadventures in foreign countries. But gradually the narrative became repetitive and a tad monotonous, making it difficult to stay engaged with the story. This is a simple story told in flashbacks, jumping between timelines–so it does get confusing and I did find it a bit difficult to keep track of so many characters in Phil’s story. Given the synopsis, I was hoping for a more intriguing read. Given the build-up and the aura of mystery surrounding Phil, there wasn't any particularly surprising revelation. However, I did find some of the characters quite interesting and I did like the writing, the splashes of humor, the historical backdrop and the vivid descriptions of the places mentioned in both the past and present. Overall, this is a decent read that I am sure many readers would enjoy.
Many thanks to Matador and NetGalley for the eGalley of this novel. All opinions expressed in this review are my own.
The author allows one the choice to consider this story to be autobiographical, semi-autobiographical, fiction disguised as biography or biography disguised as fiction. The clever part is that it really doesn't matter.
If anything this book is a memoir of a life well lived as recounted in the words of a wealthy octogenarian. A life spent working in places as diverse as Algeria, Libya and London Docklands; and more recently playing in places as colourful as Eastbourne, Monaco and Cannes.
There's charm, humour, nostalgia, a touch of regret, lots of good luck and the odd whiff of nefarious money making. I hope most of it is true.
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