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      Published in Great Britain in 2017 by Canongate Books Ltd,

      14 High Street, Edinburgh EH1 1TE

       canongate.co.uk

      This digital edition first published in 2017 by Canongate Books

      Copyright © Robert Webb, 2017

      Extract from Peep Show, season 4. Copyright © Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong. Reprinted by permission of Objective Media Group.

      Excerpt from ‘The Coward of the County’ Words and Music by Roger Bowling and Billy Edd Wheeler © Copyright 1979 Universal Music Careers/Universal Music Corporation. Universal Music Publishing MGB Limited/Universal/MCA Music Limited. All Rights Reserved. International Copyright Secured. Used by Permission of Hal Leonard Europe Limited. Excerpt from ‘Stayin’ Alive’ Words and Music by Barry Gibb, Maurice Gibb and Robin Gibb © Copyright 1977 Universal Music Publishing International MGB Limited/Crompton Songs/Redbreast Publishing Limited. Universal Music Publishing MGB Limited/Universal/MCA Music Limited. All Rights Reserved. International Copyright Secured. Used by Permission of Hal Leonard Europe Limited. Excerpt from ‘Moving’ Words and Music by Brett Anderson and Bernard Butler © Copyright 1992 BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited, a BMG Company. All Rights Reserved. International Copyright Secured. Used by Permission of Hal Leonard Europe Limited

      The moral right of the author has been asserted

      Every effort has been made to trace copyright holders and obtain their permission for the use of copyright material. The publisher apologises for any errors or omissions and would be grateful if notified of any corrections that should be incorporated in future reprints or editions of this book.

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available on request from the British Library

      ISBN 978 1 78689 011 5

      Export ISBN 978 1 78689 009 2

      eISBN 978 1 78689 010 8

      Typeset in Sabon by Palimpsest Book Production Ltd,

      Falkirk, Stirlingshire

      For Abigail

      Contents

       Overture

       ACT ONE

       1.Boys Can’t Get Enough of Dad

       2.Boys Aren’t Shy

       3.Boys Love Sport

       4.Boys Are Brave

       5.Boys Are Never Teacher’s Pet

       6.Boys Don’t Fall in Love (with other boys)

       7.Boys Are Not Virgins

       8.Boys Don’t Cry

       ACT TWO

       9.Men Are Organised

       10.Men Don’t Take Themselves Too Seriously

       11.Men Don’t Need Therapy

       12.Men Understand Women

       13.Men Are Good at Directions

       14.Men Know Who They Are

      Overture

      ‘If I get this right, Tess Rampling will definitely want to have sex with me.’ The idea slouches through my fifteen-year-old brain and disappears before I’ve had time to ask it exactly why a sixth-former of Rampling’s cosmic beauty would want to have sex with a GCSE pit-sniffer like me.

      I take Rick Astley’s ‘Never Gonna Give You Up’ out of its paper bag and gaze at his pink face. ‘Oh dear, Rick Astley, you’re not “gonna” like this. You really have no idea what’s about to happen to you.’ Gently, I lift the lid of Great-Auntie Trudy’s wooden gramophone to reveal the record turntable within.

      The gramophone used to be in Trudy’s bedroom, and when I was chin-high to its wooden lid (about four years old) we would happily listen to Terry Wogan on Radio 2 while she brushed her hair and ‘put her face on’. Or sometimes, she’d play a favourite LP like the soundtrack to The King and I. The first track of that record was called ‘Overture’ and seemed to be a non-singing medley of some of the other songs. I liked the ‘Overture’: a friendly invitation and a promise of what was to come. Some of the best tunes were missing, but I guessed that was to keep them as a surprise.

      *

      It’s not big, my room. The gramophone is among the wooden hand-me-downs that sprout from the walls and nearly meet in the middle. Here’s a chest of drawers and a little bookshelf that Mum gave me recently. Here’s the wardrobe that never yielded to Narnia no matter how faithfully I reached for the cold air.

      The bedroom walls are pale green: pock-marked with Blu-Tack scars from sci-fi posters now replaced with Van Gogh prints from Woolworths. They have ‘Vincent’ written under them in swirly writing. Recently, and with great solemnity, I took down the huge Empire Strikes Back poster – the picture of Darth Vader offering his hand to Luke. ‘Come with me,’ he says to his defeated son.

      There’s a Greenpeace picture of a boat cleaning a polluted sea by magically drawing a rainbow in its wake. I get the point it’s trying to make, but even I can see the thing has all the truth and beauty of Lester Piggott narrating his tax return. Anyway, it’s there to show that I mind about the ozone layer or something. Similarly, there’s a line drawing of a defiant-looking African boy against a horizontal tricolour which I vaguely associate with the ANC. In the impossible event that Tess Rampling ever sets foot in this room, she will instantly see that a) I disapprove of apartheid; b) I disapprove of pollution; and c) I now prefer post-impressionists to Star Wars. The first two parts are even true.

      We live next door to RAF Coningsby. They’ve finally supplied us with double glazing to make up for the familiar scream of the Tornados. The condensation I used to draw pictures in now occurs between the panes rather than on the inside, like an itch you can’t scratch. Thanks, lads. Still, the room retains its own unique and homely smell which I really like. It will be many years before someone points out that this smell has a name: ‘damp’. Occasionally my step-dad Derek loses an argument about turning on the central heating and the smell turns into what I would call the equally comforting ‘grilled dust’.

      Here, in 1987, it feels wrong to be using the gramophone in an enterprise even vaguely connected with sex, like trying to make erotic art out of Fuzzy-Felt. But then, extreme measures are sometimes necessary when it comes to the sublime person of Tess Rampling. Apart from being the Most Beautiful

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