‘Agnes
Borrowdale, seventy-five years old a week on Tuesday, hoisted
herself onto the window sill and perched astride it, gripping
the wooden frame. So far so good, she murmured, still buoyed up
by the surge of excitement. Then she turned her head from the
safety of the room and peered over the edge.'
| Synopsis |
 |
After
escaping from the old people’s home where she’d been
placed by her son Jack and his new partner, Agnes’s quest
to find her grandchildren develops unpredictably. Among the new
friends she makes on her journey are: Joe, the helpful lorry driver;
Molly, the garrulous proprietor of a small, run-down hotel; Gazza,
the student whose sprained ankle may have serious consequences
for Agnes; and Felix, the retired barrister’s clerk, whom
Agnes pulls back from attempted suicide. Hoping to rekindle his
desire to live, she invents the Dangerous Sports Euthanasia Society,
but soon fears that this falsehood, having acquired a momentum
of its own, will end in tragedy. Meanwhile, Jack, frantically
trying to trace his missing mother, spends a night in a police
cell on a drunk-driving charge, while an over-zealous young policeman
begins to suspect him of a more serious crime.
| Reviews |
 |
‘When
you read a really great book the saddest thing you can do is finish
it. I loved it - it’s a great book.’
Clarissa
Dickson Wright
‘Delightful,
enormous fun and surprisingly original.’
Sara
Maitland, The Literary Consultancy
‘This
book is both wonderfully titled and brilliantly inventive. Telling
the story of one woman's search for a reason to live, it manages
to be piercingly accurate about our daily lives while very funny
indeed.’
Jonathan
Davidson, The Orange Birmingham Book Festival
‘A
surprisingly original story – gripping stuff.’
The
Oldie
Dangerous
Sports has all the hallmarks of conventional chick lit. It's a light
read, irreverent, improbable and focused on a strong female character.
That's where the similarities end.
Lillian
Kennet The First Post.co.uk
‘A
funny and poignant story about life beginning at seventy five! Great
stuff for anyone planning to grow old disgracefully!’
The
Pitshanger Bookshop, London
‘A
terrific girls own adventure with a most unusual heroine who will
steal your heart.
The
Nottingham Evening Post
| Author
Profile : Christine Coleman |
 |

Christine
Coleman spent her childhood in the Sussex country side, and her
late teens and early twenties in Dublin, where she learned to enjoy
Guinness and climb mountains while gaining a degree in English.
She now works as manager of an Adult Education Centre in Birmingham,
and devotes most of her spare time to writing fiction and poetry.
Together
with a group of three other poets under the name of Late Shift,
she has given performances at poetry festivals and arts centres
around the country, including the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2003.
Her own poetry collection, Single Travellers, was published by Flarestack
in 2004.
The
Dangerous Sports Euthanasia Society is the first of her novels
to be published. The initial germ of the idea for this took hold
while she was dangling from a paraglider 3,000 feet above a lagoon
on an island in the Indian Ocean. She believes that the saying,
‘Life begins at forty,’ doesn’t go far enough,
and feels that as we get older we can gain inspiration from seeing
people in their seventies or eighties rise to the challenge of new
ventures.
| Author
Links |
 |
Christine
has her own website :www.christinecoleman.net
|