Purporting to be an autobiography of the antihero Tristram Shandy,
Lawrence Sterne's novel is a comic masterpiece of digression, egoism and
sensationalism, as its hilarious asides, explanations and host of
memorable secondary characters - such as Uncle Toby, Dr Slop, Parson
Yorick and Widow Wadman - take centre stage, at the expense of the
actual life events the book sets out to depict.
A humorous compendium of European thought and literature - pastiching
the likes of Locke and Bacon and referencing Pope, Swift, Cervantes and
Rabelais - emerges amid the convoluted accounts of Tristram's
conception, misnaming and accidental circumcision by a sash window, in a
shrewd narrative that examines the role and nature of language itself.