INSIGNIFICANCE
INSIGNIFICANCE
‘Impressive and uncompromising.’ —The Sunday Times
Read an extract here
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‘An ambitious and fiercely committed writer.’ —The TLS
JOSEPH is trying to focus on a plumbing job he is doing for his wife’s friend, but is distracted by the terrible things that have been happening within his family.
Joseph believes that his son has tried to kill his wife.
Joseph is afraid his son will try again.
Joseph is also terrified that his wife is going to leave him. And that he himself may not get through the day.
Insignifcance, James Clammer’s first novel for adults, unfurls over the course of a single day. Placing the reader right inside the head of its struggling narrator, it works double time, both as an act of empathy - a taste of the uncertainty and awkwardness of one vulnerable man, and his relationship with the world - and also as a tense, emotional and gripping drama.
Exploring the burdens of mental health as well as family life, as well as a particular illness called Capgras Syndrome (a condition in which someone comes to believe that a person close to them has been replaced by an imposter) - Insignificance is a deeply human story, a novel that portrays the thoughts of one working man on his own terms, without artifice or condescension… and a novel that takes us ever closer to the edge.
‘An impressive, uncompromising performance.’ —The Sunday Times
‘An impressive, moving and often troubling exploration of family tensions.’ —Literary Review
‘Clammer writes with languorous lyricism and wit.’ —The Spectator
‘[Insignificance] sinks deep into the reader's consciousness.’ —The Critic
‘We love the journey Clammer takes us on [...] we love where Clammer urges us to look.’ —Bookmunch
‘Insignificance is a careful exploration of the isolation of one day, how seismic events and encounters intersect with the ongoing battle to simply make it through.’ —The Skinny