As the world around it marches forward, the bucolic English village of
Notwithstanding remains unchanged. It is, as it always has been, a place
of pubs and cricket pitches, where local eccentrics--a retired colonel
who has eschewed clothes, a spiritualist living with the ghost of her
husband, and a dog named Archibald Scott-Moncrieff--almost fit in. In
this delightfully evocative collection of stories, in which a young
couple falls in and out of love by letter alone, an eleven-year-old boy
battles a monstrous fish, and a man of the cloth has a premonition of
death, Louis de Bernières conjures up a rural idyll long since
forgotten. Funny, bittersweet, and deeply felt, Notwithstanding is the
bestselling author of Corelli's Mandolin at his most enchanting.