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Dandy in the Underworld

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780340934081

Price: £10.99

ON SALE: 26th June 2008

Genre: Biography & True Stories / Biography: General

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‘Like Salvador Dali’s confessions, only far funnier and more self-deprecating, Dandy in the Underworld entertains as much as it revolts, is as tender as it is shocking, and as genuine as it is false.’ Independent

Sure to shock and surprise, Sebastian Horsley recounts his life story with excruciating self-knowledge and a savage wit.

‘One of the funniest, strangest and most revolting memoirs ever written.’ Sunday Times

Growing up at High Hall, in Hull, with his alcoholic mother, who regularly attempted suicide, his stepfather, a cult member dressed in orange, and his father, a crippled millionaire, Sebastian Horsley couldn’t wait to leave home.

Searching for happiness, meaning and a good outfit he embarked on a doomed career as a punk guitarist, had a stormy relationship with a notorious Scottish gangster, enjoyed a wildly successful period as a stock-market entrepeneur and experienced a near fatal stint as a shark-hunter.

Sebastian charts his years as a dandy, an artist, a male escort and a brothel connoisseur. There are the love affairs, with Rachel 1 and Rachel 2, and a harrowing descent into heroin and crack addiction. Dandy in the Underworld evokes his desperate attempts to get clean, culminating in his crucifixion in the Philippines.

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Reviews

'The fabulous and fascinating story of the flamboyant artist/writer/poet growing up in a family of chaos, alcohol and insanity. Beautifully written and unflinchingly honest, this is a mind-blowing tale of a life out of control.'
<i>Elle</i>
'Consistently witty...Dandy in the Underworld is not for everyone but it is also funny, moving and the best book of its type since Lorna Sage's Bad Blood. If you can stand it, it is likely to be one of the most compelling reads of the year.'
<i>New Statesman</i>
'Like Salvador Dali's confessions, only far funnier and more self-deprecating, Dandy in the Underworld entertains as much as it revolts, is as tender as it is shocking, and as genuine as it is false.'
<i>Independent</i>
'A flat-out demented and compelling account of a life gone wrong...hilarious, sometimes beautiful'
<i>Time Out</i>
'[he] charts his diabolical decline and fall in rip-roaring style...a devilishly charming companion as he describes his wilfully deviant journey on the road to rack and ruin
<i>Metro</i>
'it is his family that make this eye-popping memoir compelling...incredibly funny'
<i>London Paper</i>
'Dandy in the Underworld is a compulsive autobiography that tells the blackest truths in the jauntiest tone.'
<i>Independent on Sunday</i>
It's great. For although very, very funny at times, it is also useful, and possibly important; which is all the more remarkable considering that the subject, while full of a self-love that makes Narcissus look like a wallflower, would scoff at the idea of his being useful and important.
Guardian
one of the funniest, strangest, most revolting memoirs you're ever likely to read.
Sunday Times - Summer Reads