This is one of those stories that you may think you have read before, perhaps an urban legend, spread by people you may know. One of the main characters is a fresh faced, new at her job, Emily from the local Food Standards Agency, just starting out on her own after her initial training and supervised jobs with a colleague. She is now out on her own and her first job is at a Chinese takeaway, not her best job. Another is a visit to a local butchers shop run by Frank Pinch, with his brother Tom running the family pig farm. Both brothers are struggling and haven’t much of any stock either at the farm nor the shop and are struggling to keep going.
The adding to the story of an ‘after Brexit’ scenario, with the UK having left Europe and it now being all doom and gloom for the UK and all businesses due to extra costs, etc, didn’t really seem to be necessary. The farm uses illegal immigrants to help with the work load, but that is nothing new. The story also has an intern, Andy, who is mistreated by his immediate boss, Rob, who can never even get his name right, but also takes credit for all the work his team do. Andy has to set up a local marketing event for their company and ends up looking for donations of produce, especially meat, for the event.
The story goes from Emily and her inspections, to the pig farmer and butcher shop brothers and Andy the intern, through to the actual event and the prize award ceremony. The sudden glut of produce at the butchers shop and his popular home-made sausages flying off his shelves, should have had warning signs being raised by Emily after her first visit to the shop showed a nearly empty shop. A visit to the farm by some is more dangerous than should be expected. An accident brings about a way to keep the farm running a little longer, but is then taken further, on purpose.
We’ve had the horse meat scandal, now a butcher is selling what many believe to be pork, but tests have shown that someone that sent in a donation to the town event was telling ‘porkies’! What has been described as pork is certainly not – it is something much more shocking – but you need to read the full story to find out. Some of it is really funny, some parts are totally shocking. It may have started as an accident, but misunderstandings and miscommunication are comically used to further the story in weird directions. Rather than the doom and gloom scenario posed by the author, I like to believe that the UK can be great again, we can rely upon our own country to build itself up again, like after WWII, without relying on an uneven relationship with Europe, under their thumb.
An interesting enough tale, but it has been done before. Parts will make you laugh, especially Emily’s first solo inspection. Parts will make you squeal in horror. It is a dark comedy with typical British humour, which some will like, others may not. An enjoyable tale with the sorts of bosses most of us have had in the past and some comical situations, you may be glad that you haven’t experienced. I received an ARC copy of this book from Hidden Gems and I have freely given my own opinion of the book above.