Released from prison after serving his sentence for the assisted death
of his wife, his health failing and his chronic impatience exacerbated,
Dr James Darke self-isolates. But on his return he understands that he
is now a displaced person, lost in a new world for which his education
and inclinations have not prepared him.
Irascible, misanthropic, intensely bookish, fastidious in his tastes and
rich enough to indulge them, Darke is a happy shut-in, busily writing
oppositional pamphlets and composing a literary hoax. But his daughter
and the Bulgarian housekeeper she hired to look after him have other
ideas.
After Darke is a moving, witty reflection on grief, ageing and love in
all its forms, and James Darke is one of the most memorable,
exasperating yet loveable characters of contemporary fiction.