Crusaders
By (Author) Richard T. Kelly
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
1st March 2008
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
560
Width 153mm, Height 233mm, Spine 40mm
724g
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, autumn 1996, and things can only get better - or so believes the Reverend John Gore bound for the North-East after a decade's absence, charged with the mission of 'planting' a new church in the deprived West End of town.
But on his return to a Victorian city in the throes of 'regeneration', Gore finds his task complicated by run-ins with three impressive locals: Stevie Coulson, muscular chief of Newcastle's top 'security consultancy'; Martin Pallister, the local Labour MP, who has embraced the Christian Socialism dear to his party's new leader; and Lindy Clark, a tack-sharp single mother, working several jobs to stay afloat.
Gore finds himself in need of help from each of them to bring off his mission. But in doing so he learns more than he wished about the secrets people keep so as to live with themselves. Slowly, these relationships draw him into a moral maze, and he decides drastic action is needed .
Richard T. Kelly was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1970, and grew up in Northern Ireland. He is the author of Alan Clarke (1998), The Name of This Book is Dogme 95 (2000), and the authorised biography Sean Penn: His Life and Times (2004). He also edited Ten Bad Dates with De Niro: A Book of Alternative Film Lists (2007).