British comedic writer Jon Canter has written, "A Short Gentleman", which is the story of a short gentleman who is recounting a crime he committed. This crime - never specified til late in the book - is certainly not one the reader would expect this Oxford-trained "Queen's Counsel", measured in every phase of his life, to make. His confession, written in the first person, is the entire book.
Okay, Robert Purcell, QC, is a short-in-stature but long-in-accomplishment. Born in the mid-1950's to a judge and his wife, Robert has his whole life plotted out by the time he's 10 years old. Go to Winchester College and then on to Oxford, Robert wants to attain success in his law career. His love life, indeed his personal life, is equally plotted out. "Correct" wife, two children (one of each gender), a house in London, and, eventually, ownership of his parents' house in Suffolk. Robert has loved this house all his life and owning it outright is his ultimate dream.
But Robert Purcell, while brilliant in public life, is almost autistic in how he handles friendships and love in his private life. While at Oxford, he befriends/is befriended by another law student, Mike Bell, who is from a lower social level. They remain friends - Mike Bell is one of the few friends Robert Purcell keeps. While Robert climbs the legal ladder and acquires a wife and family, Mike roams the world looking for opportunities in film making. Robert wants to be a QC and Mike wants to produce avant-garde films.
How Robert manages to lose his virginity at a rather late age, acquire a girl friend - to pop up later in the story - and then find the perfect woman to marry, are all parts of the story. Pompous and without much, if any, ability to self-analyze, Robert Purcell moves through his life as if in a well-planned dream. Until his parents die...and then hell breaks loose for Robert.
One of the most interesting characters in the book is Robert's wife, Elizabeth. Herself trained as a solicitor, Elizabeth represents for Robert the perfect choice for a wife. And she goes along with the cold marriage, until one day she realises that much of her life isn't what she wants. How she comes to terms with her situation and the way she handles it is handled very well by Jon Canter. And, actually, Cantor has written a funny book, filled with interesting characters, who remain with the reader. None are caricatures though most are unlikable. The least likable is Robert Purcell but the book ends with his finally coming to some sort of understanding of himself and the others around him.
"A Short Gentleman" will not appeal to many readers, but for the right one, it's a gem.