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A Tiny Bit Marvellous
Dawn French - Author
£7.99

Book: Paperback | 129 x 198mm | 448 pages | ISBN 9780141046341 | 17 Jun 2011 | Penguin
A Tiny Bit Marvellous

Everyone hates the perfect family. So you'll love the Battles.

Mo is about to hit the big 50, and some uncomfortable truths are becoming quite apparent:

She doesn't understand either of her teenage kids, which as a child psychologist, is fairly embarrassing.

She has become entirely grey. Inside, and out.

Her face has surrendered and is frightening children.

Dora is about to hit the big 18 . . . and about to hit anyone who annoys her, especially her precocious younger brother Peter who has a chronic Oscar Wilde fixation.

Then there's Dad . . . who's just, well, dad.

A TINY BIT MARVELLOUS is the story of a modern family all living in their own separate bubbles lurching towards meltdown. It is for anyone who has ever shared a home with that weird group of strangers we call relations.

Oh and there's a dog. Called Poo.

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We sat down with Dawn for a cuppa and a chat and found out she's no longer afraid... Read our exclusive interview with Dawn >>




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Galaxy National Book Awards's Specsaver Popular Fiction Book of the Year

'In her debut novel, Dawn French has taken her gift for comedy and translated it to the page to bring us a family teetering on the edge ... hilarious,' Jane Clinton, Daily Express

'You'll laugh out loud from the first page,' Natasha Harding, The Sun

'Dawn's own witty turns of phrase fit easily into the mouths of her characters. If you enjoy watching her on screen, you'll enjoy reading this ... enriching, funny novel...' Rachel Johnson, The Mail on Sunday

'Dawn's own witty turns of phrase fit easily into the mouths of her characters. If you enjoy watching her on screen, you'll enjoy reading this,' News of the World

'[Her] status as a comedy icon has been solidified by her debut novel,' The Sunday Times

'French writes astutely and movingly on the peaks, troughs and further troughs of mother-daughter relationships ... in a book that bodes well for her future as a novelist,' Ed Potton, Saturday Review

'She relates the adventures of her dysfunctional but lovable family with aplomb. A sunny, summer holiday read,' Belfast Telegraph Morning

'Dawn French's hilarious fiction debut,' Daily Express

Chapter SIX

Oscar

Families are a frightful inconvenience, true, but nowadays we are too hasty to dismiss them.

The Battle family. My family. Hmmm.

I am utterly convinced that if only a little glitter could be sprinkled on their blandness, they might yet spring up, and dance the dance of life. This, at least, is my theory where my ancient (sixty-nine whole years for goodness’ sake) grandmama is concerned. Nothing ages a woman so rapidly as a diet of relentless Jeremy Kyle and Emmerdale . Evidenced by Grandmama, who carries the horrific strains and scars of years of loyal service to both of these demanding mistresses.

I offered her the benefi t of my company this New Year’s Eve, but informed her that as of midnight I should much like to insist that she refer to me as Master Oscar at all times. For that is whom I am, and I can’t stress enough the importance of being Oscar.

Thankfully Grandmama acquiesced to this simple request. She is dreadfully dowdy but a perfect saint. Her name is Pamela. I ask you, how was she ever supposed to make anything of herself with that ghastly moniker as her albatross? As a rule, I would never trust a woman who sports anything nylon but, in Grandmama’s case, all is forgiven due to the incontrovertible fact that she is gleefully ignorant of the joys of fashion and utterly unencumbered by a shred of style. I therefore choose not to taunt or goad her, it would only be cruelty, and poor wretch, she has no idea of the magnitude of her folly.

Bless her, she is famed in those parts of Pangbourne which are her closest environs, to be something of an expert when it comes to the preparation and serving of the fi nest of banoffee pies, and ruly, in this respect, I am extremely fortunate, for banoffee pie in all its creamy bananaish toffeeish glory is quite easily one of my primary passions in life. To taste, to savour and to have culinary congress with it, is my pure rapturous delight and gives me, frankly, a reason to live. What else is there?

So, in pursuit of this pleasure, and at the set hour, I wended my way by means of two entirely separate and equitedious omnibus experiences to Grandmama’s. I wore a high collar and one of Mater’s faux fur hats against the biting wind. I fancy the ensemble was a mite enchanting, and suited me more than a little, and I detected not a few admiring comments en route.

Once at Grandmama’s domicile I was horrifi ed to realize that she had not reserved the evening exclusively for me, but had invited in, albeit briefl y, her imbecile neighbour, the appalling Janice. A woman with the kind of face that once seen, is rarely remembered. Never was there a creature more appropriately placed to be the poster girl for euthanasia.

Why was Pamela born with such hideous contemporaries? I have no doubt that Janice was once the prettiest fool in England but now she is nothing more than a dull, agèd (sixty-two years) and ugly slattern, whose foremost crime is to assume she is always worthy of the post of centre of attention. She is blissfully unaware that this position requires the skill of being even the slightest bit amusing or interesting, if that’s not requesting too much? I am accustomed to dullards, Lord knows I am surrounded by them daily in my family, but the awful Janice takes the biscuit. And the cheese and, by Jove, the crackers.

It was the hour to suffer and suffer we did. News of her wearisome family in Wales, her bargains at the sales and her monstrous bunions were among the ripest of the topics. I wished I were rather ravaged by wild dogs and torn apart and greedily gulped down than have to sit in her atrocious company, but mercifully, she was soon bumbling off muttering something about her neglected dog.

This left Grandmama and I to our familiar New Year’s traditional schedule of a hand of cribbage, followed by the notorious banoffee pie in front of Jools Holland’s Hootenanny where we both agreed that Dizzee Rascal was, frankly, dazzling. A satisfying evening with much to recommend it. I look forward to a decade of scandalous delights and I promise earnestly to remain forever Oscar.

Dawn French’s Five Favourite Books

  1. Decline and Fall (Evelyn Waugh): A very funny study of British manners.
  2. Any Human Heart (William Boyd): A huge panoramic investigation of one man's life, how he affects so many other people and what he learns on the journey.
  3. To Esme in Love and Squalor (J.D. Salinger): A story that I read and absolutely loved as a teenager and that has always stayed with me.
  4. Puckoon (Spike Milligan): Absolutely hilarious. The author breaks down the fourth wall by talking to and arguing with the characters in the book.
  5. The Hobbit (J.R.R .Tolkien): Because my uncle read it aloud to us as children and we just adored it.