The solar is rising above a Roman amphitheatre simply exterior Cirencester, the place two law enforcement officials have been referred to as to the scene. Lurking inside this historic wreck is a very grisly shock: a person has been suspended from a sideways wood cross. This isn’t, as you’d be forgiven for assuming, the introduction to a very disturbing episode of a Midsomer Murders spin-off, or some center England reboot of The Wicker Man. Welcome, as an alternative, to the opening chapter of Richard Madeley’s new novel, Father’s Day.
It’s a scene that the veteran broadcaster retold together with his imitable panache throughout a latest look on BBC Radio 2. “There’s a person who has been crucified,” he instructed host Michael Ball. “He’s very lifeless.” Madeley’s synopsis, with all its uncommon over-enunciations and meandering non-sequiturs about Roman historical past (did we actually must know the amphitheatre’s seating capability within the first century AD?), was an inevitable hit on Twitter/X. “I used to be listening to this yesterday and practically crashed the automobile,” one social media consumer wrote in response.
The 68-year-old, who turned a family title whereas presenting ITV’s This Morning within the late Eighties up till the early Noughties alongside spouse Judy Finnigan, however now flies solo as a bunch on Good Morning Britain, has acquired a fame as a real-life Alan Partridge. He definitely shares a penchant for odd asides and unwieldy anecdotes, in addition to an offbeat interview model, with Steve Coogan’s comedy character (Madeley, for his half, says he “couldn’t care much less” concerning the comparisons, as a result of “taking your self severely is daft”).
Simply this week, he might be seen on GMB inspecting Kerry Katona’s new nostril job at uncomfortably shut vary. Different biggest hits embrace the time he contemplated whether or not we must always “pity” Prince Andrew, his weird interrogation of the RMT’s basic secretary Mick Lynch (“Are you or are you not a Marxist?”) or the unforgettable second when a vivid orange Madeley turned up for filming after over-zealously making use of his daughter’s faux tan as a moisturiser. However might the presenter’s new e book be his most unintentional Partridge enterprise but?
Father’s Day is just not Madeley’s first literary effort. He has been writing novels for simply over a decade (earlier than that, he launched the autobiographical Fathers & Sons, which seemed again at his fraught relationship together with his dad) and he and Finnigan have headed up the Richard and Judy E-book Membership for even longer than that, lending their seal of approval to crowd-pleasing business fiction. His again catalogue is stuffed with mysteries and murders set in opposition to the backdrop of picturesque places, usually within the form of locations the place a TV presenter may need a second house (assume the south of France, the Lake District or, as within the case of his newest work, the Cotswolds).
After that dramatic opening chapter, issues take a good darker flip. The (very) lifeless man, we be taught, was a twisted catfish who skulked round in web chat rooms, pretending to be a troubled teen named Rosie (he was the truth is a fortysomething loner and leisure cat killer named Arthur, who lived in his dad and mom’ field room). He drew younger ladies into his confidence, then inspired them to begin harming themselves and even take into account suicide. Did Arthur’s killer learn about his terrible proclivities? Have been they motivated by revenge?
It’s fairly grim stuff – or at the very least it will be, had been it not always lightened up by Madeley’s great Partridgeisms. Superstar novelists are sometimes accused of merely hiring a ghostwriter then slapping their title on the entrance of their e book and taking all of the glory. You possibly can inform Madeley didn’t do that, as a result of the narrator’s voice is, nicely, so very him. Generally the writing is so blunt as to change into virtually poetic. “The person seemed just like the t**t he was,” goes one evocative description of a TV historian roped in to supply perception on the Roman-style crucifixion.
Elsewhere, the narrative is heavy with references to what you possibly can solely think about are a number of the writer’s favorite preoccupations. There are prolonged sequences dedicated to a protagonist’s home hunt: “Three bedrooms. Orchard backyard. Views of the village throughout a wooded valley. Freehold.” Tick, tick, tick. Later, we be taught that, pre-crucifixion, the novel’s killer was scrupulous concerning the structural integrity of the wood cross, as “the expertise of working with the architect on his kitchen refit had introduced house the significance of correctly designing a construction and ensuring he had the best instruments and supplies on the prepared”. Kevin McCloud would both be proud or mildly disturbed.
Automobiles are all the time respectfully referred to by their full model names and Coldplay’s “Viva la Vida” will get a stunning quantity of airtime. “It all the time sends a tingle down my backbone,” says Nick, the aforementioned home hunter, who occurs to be a profitable novelist who writes books – “all Sunday Instances bestsellers” – concerning the Roman empire. He’s additionally very, very eager for Aidan Turner to star within the subsequent TV adaptation. Nick embarks on this profession, we be taught, after one college tutor kindly takes him apart and tells him: “We consider it’s best to write novels, and maybe performs or screenplays, primarily based in your great, instinctive grasp of what it was to be Roman.” If solely all universities supplied such ego-boosting careers recommendation, reasonably than taking a look at your arts diploma and asking in the event you’ve ever thought-about making use of for the civil service quick stream.
Nick’s line of labor explains the near-constant bombardment of tangential particulars concerning the Romans. The person is the proper advert for the widespread popular culture idea (propagated on that almost all dependable of sources, TikTok) that males take into consideration the Roman empire at the very least as soon as a day. Even when he’s attempting to get pleasure from a date with a ravishing pathologist named Sally, he can’t resist from sprinkling a number of Roman info into their dialog. Like each good feminine love curiosity, Sally is blessed with “what would have been described in an earlier period as movie star appears”. These movie star appears, we be taught, are very particular. “Certainly she was usually mistaken for the British actress Felicity Jones,” Madeley writes, a resemblance “which had led to a tabloid newspaper story claiming that the star had moved to the Cotswolds”.
In equity to Madeley, his e book isn’t all unusual asides and Felicity Jones doppelgangers. Past this, he’s fairly adept at weaving collectively completely different narratives and time frames, and the underlying story asks attention-grabbing questions on retribution, justice and who will get to dish this out. With a grisly homicide plot and a picturesque location, you need to wonder if he, like Nick, has been writing with one eye on a TV deal. It definitely has the makings of a barely unhinged ITV three-parter. I’m wondering if Aidan Turner’s bought a spot in his schedule.