Hunky Dory (novel): Difference between revisions

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|release date  = [[22 January (releases)|22 January]] [[2021 (releases)|2021]]
|release date  = [[22 January (releases)|22 January]] [[2021 (releases)|2021]]
|price          = £12.00
|price          = £12.00
|isbn          = 979-8580066561
|isbn          = ISBN: 979-8580066561
|format        = Paperback book, 475 pages
|format        = Paperback book, 475 pages
}}
}}

Revision as of 00:00, 26 January 2021

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prose stub

Hunky Dory was a Paul Magrs novel released in January 2021. Magrs described it as the first standalone literally novel he had written in years;[1] its main character, Dodie Golightly, originated in the 2013 Iris Wildthyme story The Ninnies on Putney Common.

Publisher's summary

Dodie Golightly has just taken charge of Hunky Dory café: the best café in the world. In a neglected corner of south Manchester they've been serving frothy coffee and late night pizzas longer than Dodie's even been alive. She's in her mid-thirties, still living at home, and waiting for her life to start. She's hidden herself away too long..!

Her mother Elena has other ideas for the café her recently-deceased husband created. She's decided it's time to go upmarket and continental. This glamorous widow is a bundle of energy: intent on saving the local library, finishing off her memoirs and even organising a little light kidnapping of unruly Creative Writing Professors...

New to the Golightly circle is Ian – a young gay man who comes to work at the café: whose dream is to have a tiny secondhand bookshop and watch the world go by. He's cynical about love and stuck in a mostly-off romance with a lad who works on the market. But this is the year that Ian's about to fall in love at last...

It looks as if Dodie has found love, too – with a sexy, slightly tubby guy who's writing the strangest-sounding sci-fi novel in the world. These three and their best friends and neighbours embark on all kinds of adventures through long summer nights in Manchester, with library sit-ins, nights out dancing, hostage-takings and lots of nocturnal coffee and gin...

A bit like Armistead Maupin in multicultural south Manchester - it's a novel about storytelling, friendship and love: and about finding your place in the world.

Plot

to be added

Characters

more to be added

References

Notes

to be added

Continuity

External links

Footnotes