Braywatch
By (Author) Ross O'Carroll-Kelly
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Books Ltd
3rd August 2021
27th May 2021
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Humorous fiction
823.92
Paperback
400
Width 127mm, Height 198mm, Spine 23mm
275g
Ross has got a new job and it's making him question everything he thought he knew . . . South Dublin's favourite son thought he could face any challenge - until he was asked to cross the bridge over the River Dargle. For Ross O'Carroll-Kelly - schools rugby hero, celebrated bon vivant and lover of beautiful women - life has suddenly become complicated. His father has been accused of rigging a General Election, his seventy-year-old mother is about to bring six surrogate babies into the world, and his daughter is being hailed as 'Ireland's answer to Greta Thunberg', telling everyone who cares to listen that the end of the world is nigh. As if that wasn't bad enough, the Greatest Rugby Player Never to Play for Ireland has a nagging sense that he has to more to contribute to the beautiful game. Now he's been offered a job coaching an underachieving school who've been waiting almost a century for their moment of glory. The challenge is to persuade a collection of jokers, chokers and forty-a-day smokers that they have what it takes to win the Leinster Schools Senior Cup. The only drawback ... the school is in Bray!
Ross is a national institution ... wicked humour and sharp observation * Irish Times *
Riotously funny ... Surrender to laugh out loud humour yet again * Irish Examiner *
One of the funniest writers in the land * Irish Independent *
Extraordinarily accurate and outstandingly funny * Sunday Business Post *
Camino Royale is the twenty-sixth book in Paul Howard's 'Ross O'Carroll-Kelly' series. Ross books have sold over one million copies, are annually nominated for the Popular Fiction prize at the Irish Book Awards - where they have won the prize an unprecedented three times - and are also critically acclaimed as satirical masterpieces. One of the series - The Oh My God Delusion - was chosen as Ireland's favourite book in Eason's 125th birthday poll.