*When I was fourteen, my family had a nervous breakdown...
*
It is 1997. To himself, Benjamin Carter is a thing drifted somehow out
of its orbit. With the news that Great Aunt Pearl is dead, his summer is
looking like yet another non-starter. There's his summons to the
clearance of her ramshackle house. His dad's awkward pep talks. A toxic
cocktail of over-zealous aunts and uncles. And then there's the Church
of the Holy Heavens―the space cult that's been wooing Pearl for all
she's worth.
It was supposed to be simple: grieve, junk, funeral, home. But from the
side-lines, Ben can see the cracks starting to show. When the search for
a will goes off-beam, the Carters find themselves under siege by the
property they all crave. Alone in the house together, the Carters' lives
lock into something unrecognisable and their pursuit of Aunt Pearl's
not-quite-worldly goods entirely consumes them. As Ben comes
face-to-face with death, a new person emerges: curious, uninhibited,
free-falling. In Life on Other Planets, Matt Cook has created a
startling portrait of a young man caught between trying to live his life
and trying to run from it. Comedies of English manners have rarely been
darker.
- 'Not many writers would see the possibilities of crafting a novel out
of a house clearance -- but Matt Cook does so brilliantly in this
funny, shrewd and satirical book' - The Spectator
- 'Inventive, tender and genuinely funny. Matt Cook's brilliant debut is
a hugely entertaining exploration of family, belonging, and the
mysteries of the great beyond' - Adam Marek, author of Instruction
Manual for Swallowing
- 'Fact: Matt Cook is a remarkable new literary voice and Life on Other
Planets is cosmically good. With a unique vision and writing that
brings to mind J.D. Salinger by way of Charlie Kaufman, he illuminates
family in all its complexity' - Mary Otis, author of Yes, Yes,
Cherries
- 'Great Aunt Pearl's house, disappearing under layers of junk is the
seething, decrepit setting for this dark comedy of sickly gloom and
psychic disintegration. I found myself willingly submitting to this
strange, touching, beautifully written book' - Jeff Young, author of
Ghost Town: A Liverpool Shadowplay