Booker Prize Winner
The Last Orders
by Graham Swift
Summary
Four old friends drive from a Bermondsey pub to the Kent coast, carrying the ashes of a fifth and the accumulated weight of decades of shared and separate lives. Swift rotates the narration among them and the dead man himself, building a chorus of working-class south London voices that drift between past and present. The novel is a quietly moving meditation on friendship, regret and the small rituals by which ordinary people mourn.
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Historical Context & Significance
The book faced brief controversy over its structural similarities to William Faulkner's 'As I Lay Dying'.