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The P45 Diaries
 
 

The P45 Diaries [Kindle Edition]

Ben Hatch
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (106 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

*Special promotional price for a limited period*

BBC Radio 4 Book of the Year.

The Mirror: "I laughed my head off, then cried my eyes out."

Mel and Sue: "Excellent fun."

The Times: "A coming of age tale, it folds together the best aspects of Bridget Jones and Adrian Mole."


MEET JAY:

"My name is Jay Golden and the reason I've started a diary is so that researchers will be able to piece together my early life when I'm a famous celebrity. It will help them get their facts straight and stop them having to rely on potentially corrupting sources such as Big Al from Big Al's Golden Delicious Doner Kebabs and dad who thinks I'm a prat. Following the triumph of my novel (“It Purred. Golden is a genius.”) I will give one interview to Melvyn Bragg at Quaglinos over seafood marinere and caramelised squid then disappear into obscurity to become a hermit like JD Salinger."


Jay is 18 and keeps a diary better than he keeps any job. His countless sackings and relentless taunting of his father’s BBC celebrity friends mix with the emotions of a family adjusting to loss. Desperate for literary fame, and unable to accept that a man with as many UCCA points as he has, must now show “hustle” in the lobby area of Chesham McDonalds, Jay dreams of running away to Africa to dig water wells, of becoming a freedom-fighter in Syria and of making it so big in the lawnmower business he owns a kidney-bean shaped swimming pool full of bunny girls. But first he has to get off his arse and stop watching Countdown in his pyjamas. In short he has to grow up. As poignant as it is funny, stand back to hear Jay’s unique insights on life, love and the correct amount of lettuce to apply to a McChicken sandwich.


WHAT THEY SAID:

BBC Radio 4 (Charlie Lee-Potter): "It brought tears to my eyes. I read it with mascara dripping down my cheek. So sad and yet so funny. I laughed out loud."

The Guardian: "Jay is like many a middle-class 18-year-old: workshy but harbouring grandiose ambition, wrestling with his first relationship and on the brink of being forced from the nest. Jay merrily trips though his beleaguered circumstances as we giggle our way through the text. But then, as Jay loses one job after another, looking out for his younger brother while his father dines his celebrity friends, we stop laughing and reach for our Kleenex. Hatch approaches the themes of loss and reconciliation with fierce intelligence and heartfelt authenticity."

The Scotsman: "Adrian Mole meets Billy Liar with a running Holden Caulfield joke. Surprisingly funny."

Daily Express: "Jay is the ineffective and inept son of a successful father - his diary is an account of his numerous failed jobs and his attempt to achieve fame."

Birmingham Post: "Witty, moving and entertaining. I defy anyone who's ever been a teenager, or a concerned parent not to love it."

Lisa Jewell: "Touching, intelligent and very funny."

The Lady: "Jay's life of loafing will have you guffawing out loud."

NB. This book was previously published as The Lawnmower Celebrity.




Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 525 KB
  • Print Length: 295 pages
  • Publisher: Ben Hatch (27 Nov 2013)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00GYBQUVM
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray:
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (106 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #175 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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More About the Author

Ben Hatch's latest novel is called THE P45 DIARIES: How To Get Sacked From Every Job in Britain. Currently being developed as a BBC sitcom, and a former BBC Radio 4 Book of The Year, it was previously titled The Lawnmower Celebrity and is based loosely on Ben's woeful experiences of his teens and 20s when his dad thought he was an oaf.
Ben was born in London and grew up there, in Manchester and also in Buckinghamshire, where he lived in a windmill that meant he was called Windy Miller at school for years, though he's not been scarred by this experience at all. He now lives in Brighton with his tiny wife Dinah, and two children, in a normal house. He likes cheese and is balding although he disguises this fact by spiking his hair to a great height to distract people he wishes to impress.
Ben (who is actually writing this and pretending to be someone else)has written for The Guardian, The Times, The Daily Telegraph, The Daily Mail and The Daily Express among other newspapers. Previously he wrote ROAD TO ROUEN: A 10,000 Mile Journey In A Cheese-filled Passat that was a Number One bestseller and ARE WE NEARLY THERE YET? 8,000 Miles Round Britain In A Vauxhall Astra, a BBC Radio 2 Book of the Year, and also a Number One bestseller. It is also under development as a film by Island Pictures.
Ben is the tallest Hatch who ever lived (5ft 9in) and is the son of Sir David Hatch, the radio performer and producer whose shadow Ben doesn't at all feel under. He also maintains that he knows the cure for the common cold (tweet him at @BenHatch to find this out) and that one of his relatives was John Couch-Adams who discovered the planet Neptune. Apparently, his aunty told him.

Many years ago his novel the International Gooseberry was published by Orion. It was about a hapless backpacker with a huge ungovernable toenail. It was described as "hysterical and surprisingly sad" by the Daily Express. Ben Hatch was on the long-list of Granta's 2003 list of the most promising 20 young authors in the UK, but missed out on final inclusion possibly because of the toenail stuff. In association with his wife Dinah, he has also written three guidebooks for Frommer's.

You can visit Ben Hatch at https://www.facebook.com/BenHatchAuthor although his page is a bit rubbish.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Peppered with the laugh-out-loud, slightly anti-establishment humour and characterised by the easy prose that will be familiar to those who have read Ben Hatch's memoirs of travels with his wife and children, this novel is not as different from those books as might be expected. As I noted in my reviews of "Road to Rouen" and "Are We Nearly There Yet?", those books also have at their heart important themes of family relationships, love and loss, lurking beneath observational humour and banter.

"The P45 Diaries" (a much better title, incidentally, than that of the earlier edition of this book, "The Lawnmower Celebrity") starts out in Adrian-Mole or Mr Pooter tradition as the diary of Jay, an 18 year old middle-class son of an important BBC TV executive. It's soon clear that this is not going to be pure comedy when it's revealed that his lovely mum has recently died relatively young of cancer. Despite her careful preparation of the rest of the family for coping with out her, e.g. lessons in how to use the microwave, neither Jay, his dad, or his siblings are coping well.

Being an 18 year old with no clear idea of where he's heading is hard enough without a crisis of that kind, and the reader slowly realises that Jay is going into meltdown, risking serious rifts with his family and friends, and jeopardising his dad's high-powered career that pays for Jay's own failure to hold down even the most menial job. As Jay's irritating habits and irresponsible behaviour get beyond a joke, wearing down the reader as well as the characters in the novel, it becomes clear that his apparently selfish attitude to his future is really an expression of the unresolved grief that affects not only him but all the family.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Another excellent book from Ben Hatch 30 Nov 2013
Format:Kindle Edition
Having loved Ben Hatch's accounts of his marathon journeys with his family around Britain and France in Are We Nearly There Yet? and Road to Rouen respectively I was really looking forward to this book but unlike the previous two books this is fictional so would I enjoy it as much?
Happily the answer is a resounding yes. The diary writer, a young man called Jay Golden reminded me of Holden Caulfield. He is on the brink of adulthood but the idea of what he perceives to be a mundane 9 to 5 existence horrifies him. He loses one job after another and is constantly at odds with his father. At first Jay isn't always the easiest person to like, however, as the book progresses I warmed to this young man trying to find his place in the world whilst experiencing the highs and lows of first love and as we gradually learn, struggling to cope with the death of his mum. Having lost my own mum to cancer when I wasn't much older than Jay meant it was at times a painful read but crying because you've been moved by what you're reading is a sign of a good book in my eyes. Knowing from Ben's works of non-fiction that The P45 Diaries is semi-autobiographical made it all the more poignant.
This is a book that will have you sighing with exasperation, snorting with laughter and wiping away the tears. It's honest, funny and very very moving. I'm sure Ben Hatch fans and those new to his books will thoroughly enjoy The P45 Diaries, I certainly did.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Just buy this! 7 Dec 2013
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
If you can find more pleasure for 99p, please let me know how.

That's all I wanted to say really, but the Amazon thought police, dubious of brevity, insist I write more.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Moving account with a assured light touch too 13 Dec 2013
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book gripped me after a rather blunt-edged beginning. I'm glad I kept going, as the relationships, particularly with his dying mother, were convincing. A good read.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Another gem! 12 Dec 2013
By JM
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I've now read all three Ben Hatch books and this one, a novel; was different to the others and just as good. BH's really catchy and witty writing shines throughout and engages the reader in an autobiographical diary of a quirky 18 year old's outlook on his life, his family and his friends.
It made me laugh out loud (a lot) and also shed a few tears too. Definitely a finish in one go novel. Looking forward to the next book.
CM
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Having read Ben Hatch's travel journals I was looking forward to the same sense of humour in this fictional work. I am pleased to say I found it there - and having read the other books I think they may even be some nuggets of truth in this novel too - Dad works for the BBC hmmmm....

However alongside the laughs is a poignant tale of a lost teenager, his despairing and equally lost dad and his rather more sorted girlfriend.

I wasn't expecting as many tears during this book but I can partly blame hormones and being heavily pregnant for that. Plus I cry at X Factor so it's no surprise really. But the touching tales of Jay's mother had me in floods of tears at times, yet still managed to add a laugh to the page just in time to stop me from drowning in a sea of my own salty tears.

Looking forward to more from Ben in future.
My only criticism of this novel is there was not nearly enough cheese in it compared with his non fiction works. Maybe cheese is only really good in real life?
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A gem of a book! 11 Dec 2013
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Another gem of a book from Ben Hatch.
It's laugh out loud funny and occasionally heartbreakingly sad - I found myself alternately sympathising with father and son. Family relationships are at the heart of this well written and engaging book. Read it & enjoy!!!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars The P45 Diaries
Touching, poignant and incredibly funny.
Lots of stuff we can all relate to and written in a style that makes reading easy and enjoyable.
Thanks Ben - don't go changing.
Published 3 days ago by Mrs. C. Baldwin
2.0 out of 5 stars Didn't finish it
Just repetitive and dull. The main character is such an annoying prick I gave up caring what happened to him.
Published 15 days ago by J. Palmer
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovely book, give it a go
I've seen this book compared to the Adrian Mole diaries and to the Bridget Jones books. It's not really like either, except that it is a diary and it's very funny in places. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Linda
5.0 out of 5 stars A great read.
A great book by a great guy. Miss it if you dare. Had me in stitches. His other books are just as good.
Published 1 month ago by A. G. J. Nash
5.0 out of 5 stars P45 diaries
I really enjoyed this book. The juxtaposition of this cocky teenager who knows everything (but kind of recognises he's still a little lost)and his heartbreaking account of his... Read more
Published 1 month ago by fussy phil
4.0 out of 5 stars Well worrth a read
Hilariously funny in places, poignant in others, a lovely story that I thoroughly enjoyed, I loved his hero, Jay, and his relationships with his dad, brother Charlie and girlfriend... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Punk Rocker
2.0 out of 5 stars Not my cup of tea
This won't apply to everyone but it just didn't float my boat. I love Bens other 2 books, Are We Nearly There Yet and Road to Rouen, and I cannot wait for the next travel... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Shortieburnside1980
1.0 out of 5 stars painful slow read
Downloaded cos it had been radio 4 book. V slow self obsessed story.... not my kind of read. Slow slow
Published 1 month ago by popey
5.0 out of 5 stars Very humorous but also heart-wrenchingly sad
Very credible story of a teen boy coping with growing up whilst simultaneously losing his Mum to cancer. Very moving.
Published 1 month ago by L. J. Grant
2.0 out of 5 stars Prefer Ben Hatch's travel writing
Having read and laughed my way through Ben Hatch's two travel writing titles, I was looking forward to reading this novel. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Stepas
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