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ABOUT THE BOOK
Meet the Hunter family: Adam, Kate, their children Hal and Charlotte.
And Prince, their black Labrador.
Prince is the canine narrator of this tragi-comic tale of family life. As with
all Labradors he has devoted his entire existence to preserving the happiness
and security of his human masters by striving hard to live up to the Labrador
pact:
Remain Loyal to your Human Masters
Serve and Protect the Family at Any Cost.
Other dogs, led by the Springer Spaniels, have revolted. Their slogans are
'Dogs for Dogs, not for Humans' and 'Pleasure not Duty'.
Mentored by an elderly Labrador called Henry, Prince takes his responsibilities
seriously, and as things in the Hunter family begin to go badly awry, his responsibilities
threaten to overwhelm him. It all starts when Simon, an old friend of Adam's
from school and now a successful businessman, moves in next door with his beautiful
young wife, Emily. Adam becomes besotted with her. It also turns out that Simon
has played a significant part in Kate's past and has a dark secret that threatens
to destroy the family for ever. To complicate matters further, Hal is becoming
a party animal and Charlotte has found herself a boyfriend her father hates.
Down in the park it's even worse: Henry has disappeared. Emily's dog, Falstaff
- a Springer Spaniel (the anarchists of the dog world) wants to lead Prince
astray and Prince suspects that the Rottweiler, Lear, who terrorises the park,
has killed Joyce, the Irish wolfhound.
A brilliant reworking of Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part I, The Last Family
in England explores the hidden dangers of family life from the perspective
of the only family member who gets to see everything.
'A winner from page one
A subtle, dog's-eye view of the frailty
of human relationships, it is perceptive,
enchanting and destined to be this summer's must read'
Mail on Sunday
'A remarkable book, and a brilliantly entertaining read'
Big Issue
'A comic tour de force
A desperately sad view from
underneath as a family falls apart'
The Times
'It sounds kooky, but Haig pulls it off stylishly and unsentimentally'
Observer
'Normally if a book makes me sad I chuck it immediately.
But this book is so brilliant, I broke my own rule'
Julie Burchill
'I love this book. It's fabulous and moving and funny and strange.
It will go down among the great animal books'
Jeanette Winterson
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Matt Haig was born in Sheffield in 1975 and grew up in Nottinghamshire. He
has lived in London and Ibiza, where he worked for the Manumisson Club. He now
lives in Leeds. His writing has appeared in the Guardian, the Sunday Times,
the Independent, the Sydney Morning Herald and the Face. He is the author of
eight business books including Brand Failures (Kogan Page), a well-received
account of classic marketing mistakes. He may or may not be a dog owner.
AUTHOR INTERVIEW
Interview with Matt Haig, taken from the Daily Mail, 7th May 2005
'My life has really swung between short-term pleasure and long-term duty. Between
the person who just drinks all day and doesn't think about anything, and the
career/relationship-minded person who wants to keep all that in check. The book
is about the battle with those two sides of myself.
As a rebellious teenager, I used to think that rules and obligations to society
and family were essentially wrong and you should test everything before agreeing
to do it, but I have changed. I now think that rules and order and duty are
not only as liberating as anarchy, but, in fact, more so. If life is a glass
of water, rules are the glass. Without the glass, you can't drink the water.
It keeps everything in place.
Society is now so pleasure-seeking that family life has become very fragile.
I am trying to look at it as objectively as possible and observe how amazing
it is that families stay together today. Most of my friends had single parents.
My (happy) family was so rare that it felt a bit as if we were the last family
in England. Hence my choice of title.
I wanted to write a story about family and family values, and I wanted to have
a dog in it, originally only as a pet. But one night I watched a documentary
about understanding your dog's behaviour and I decided to turn it on its head
and have a dog who would give his own guide to human behaviour, and who would
be more insightful. Hence the narrator. I decided to make the dog as believable
as possible, rather than a cutesy, cartoony dog, so that, if people bought a
book told from a dog's perspective, they had to believe everything about it.
A family isn't complete without the pet dog. But, whereas, decades ago, dogs
had the role of being a guard dog or ornamental, now they are almost like therapists.
They are always there when you need them. You can stroke them and talk to them
about your problems, and they are much better than humans at tolerating you
prattling on and being self-obsessed. They help release tension. '
STARTING POINTS FOR YOUR DISCUSSION
- Matt Haig uses the Labrador, Prince, as the narrator of the story. We see
the idiosyncrasies of our world by viewing humans through the eyes of a dog.
Does using a dog rather than a human narrator change the story-telling experience
and our viewpoint towards the characters and issues in the novel?
- The constant struggle between our outward duty and our internal desires
is seen in all the characters in the novel. Discuss this central conflict
between family duty and selfish pleasure in the novel.
- Discuss the viewpoints put forth regarding family values in the novel.
- Prince's mentor, the Labrador Henry, is a complex character. Discuss Henry
and his purpose in the novel.
- Henry IV part I inspired the sub-plot of book. In Shakespeare's
play, Prince Hal is caught between following his duty as future King of England,
as represented by his Father King Henry, and the world of mischief and hedonistic
self-indulgence, represented by Sir Jack Falstaff. In the novel Prince faces
a similar predicament as he is caught between his duty to the family and the
world of mischief that the Springer Spaniel Falstaff attempts to lead him
into. Is the reworking of the play effective?
- The animals in the novel are seen to be generally superior to the humans.
Compare the differences (and similarities) between humans and animals in the
novel.
OTHER BOOKS BY MATT HAIG
BUSINESS BOOKS
Brand Failures
SUGGESTED FURTHER READING
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time ~ Mark Haddon (Vintage,
2004)
Lorelei's Secret ~ Carolyn Parkhurst (Sceptre, 2004)
Henry IV Part I ~ William Shakespeare
ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCES
Read an extract.
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