Blott on the Landscape

by Tom Sharpe

Other authorsPaul Sample (Illustrator)
Paperback, 1979

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Collection

Publication

PAN BOOKS (1979), Edition: 5th printing, Paperback, 240 pages

Description

Sir Giles Lynchwood, millionaire property developer and Tory MP, is determined to see a motorway driven through the ancestral home of his spouse, Lady Maud. As local opposition grows, the MP is devoured by lions, and Lady Maud marries her gardener, Blott.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Lukerik
This novel would be of interest to

a) someone looking to learn about British culture

b) a Brit with authority issues

I fall into neither of these groups. There's nothing actually wrong with the novel. There are some funny bits. I failed to finish it as I just didn't care what happened.
LibraryThing member tzelman
Very funny English farce, Blott a likeable romantic hero
LibraryThing member Esta1923
Blott on the Landscape by Tom Sharpe is very British: in its setting, and in the background ideas (wealthy, titled persons using clout to get what they want no matter what is best for their community). Sharpe's characters may remind readers of Monty Python (or Frye and Laurie!) but the chap who
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comes out on top is unique and it is worth reading to meet Blott.
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LibraryThing member leslie.98
4 stars for the book & 4.5 stars for this audiobook edition. David Suchet was brilliant as the narrator; his different voices for the characters were so varied that at times it was hard to believe that they were all being done by the same person!

I found the humor in this often vulgar and yet never
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offensive. It was sort of a mish-mash of Benny Hill & P.G. Wodehouse -- the zany plot was very Wodehousian but the sex and the language was more Benny Hill. While that description sounds like something I would not enjoy very much, I often found myself laughing aloud during this.
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LibraryThing member Mrs_McGreevy
If you're a fan of British humour, and by British humour I mean truly horrifying things happening to people so vile that it's funny rather than off-putting, you have to read Tom Sharpe.

His first 2 books (Indecent Exposure and Riotous Assembly) are satires on the apartheid-era South African police
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force so biting they got Sharpe tossed out of the country.

Since then, he's turned his satiric gaze on the Brits, and the results are often laugh-out-loud funny.

Blott is an Italian gardener (who's not really Italian) who works for Lady Maud Lynchwood, whose family has lived in Handyman House for 500 years. Lady Maud, who has a...strong personality, opposes a motorway that would cuth through her property and require the destruction of Handyman House. Her husband, Sir Giles Lynchwood, secretly welcomes the motorway, as he stands to make some shady money on it, plus he hates Lady Maud and Handyman House. Throw in a forgetful mistress, acts of eco-terrorism, and an estate full of live lions and trouble is just bound to ensue.
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LibraryThing member EricCostello
Pretty much your standard mix of Sharpe's ouevre: sex, violent explosions, a dose of politics, and financial skullduggery. Some memorable characters do help, like Blott, the ex-POW who perhaps absorbs too much English literature and political speechifying. If you like Sharpe, good enough. But
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reading too many of his novels gives you the impression he's simply ringing the changes on the same theme.
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LibraryThing member antao
Who’s funnier? Lee Child, P. G. Wodehouse, or Tom Sharpe? (*) What has happened to funny books these days? Most of these are old, some very old. The Goodreads best of 2016 humour category was all non-fiction (apart from an Alan Partridge autobiography which is still sort of... but not quite).
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There's nothing wrong with old. Except I've read or decided not to read most of them already. Where's the next great comic novelist? Same with TV. Lucky to get anything that isn't swish, poo-faced, up its own arse, wanky drama.

Remember being stuck in the library of the British Council when I was 15 I think and starting to read a borrowed copy of Blott. I’d never read anything even vaguely comic before and was quickly in absolute shuddering tatters. Unfortunately I was a wee specky fanny at the time and couldn’t control myself which was way too embarrassing as the library was jam full of raging adults and weirdly quiet. I kept trying to get a hold of myself and stop laughing. Put the book down, stared at my shoes, all of which made it worse when I battered on a few pages and ended up blowing snot bubbles all over the sofa in the reading room. Later on I bought “Blott on the Landscape”. So many people often asked me why I was laughing so much that they had to borrow the book...eventually the people who borrowed the book lent it to people who wondered why they were laughing so much ...and then they lent it to other people....and I never got the book back !!!!!!!!!... I hate you all!!!.... Bastards!!!
Within a month I think I’d tanned everything he’d written and rattled onto Wodehouse. But the most I've guffawed at a book is when reading Tom Sharpe. From the razor sharp satire of his South Africa books, to his excellent social commentary in the “Wilt On High” and Porterhouse books he always had me roaring with laughter. He abandoned his edge for curmudgeons in his last few books but they still excelled in farce. I recall re-reading “The Throwback”, his tale of inbred aristocrats, and understanding why Cameron et al were such useless sods. You see books advertised as being 'Like Tom Sharpe' but, in reality, none of them are. No-one has captured the sheer farce of his books and think a bit of badly-written smut and bad language is all that it takes. It's “Blott on the Landscape” for me every time I need to cheer myself up.

Un-PC British romping farces! The way he brought his characters to life on the page and the comical antics that they got up to during the seemingly mundane activities of life always made me laugh out loud and was perhaps unique to Tom Sharpe's way of writing.

NB (*): Close call. First things first. Jeeves and Wooster: The episode of Gussie dressed as the devil after a fancy dress ball and the taxi driver clutching the railings made me fall of the sofa with laughter. Honoria Glossop 'with a laugh like a troop of cavalry going over a tin bridge'. I fell in love with them at about 12 and I still have deep affection for them. Gussie Fink-Nottle, 'face like a fish', lives on forever. I must admit that when I was reading Boris Johnson's column in the Telegraph I always hear the voice of a Wodehouse chinless wonder in my head…But I think nothing beats Lee Child. Anything by Lee Child is always improved by the knowledge that Lee takes himself seriously; after a while every novel becomes about when, how, or if Jack Reacher will manage to change his underpants. I few years ago I went on cruise to the Greek islands; the library on the ship was fully stocked up with Lee Child books; his or her readers were happy to discard them afterwards. With nothing else to read, I got started and must confess, the logistics around him not stinking due to his 'travel light' policy was the most gripping thing about the books! I can’t wait to read “Blue Moon” coming out this month. Will Reacher finally change his underpants I wonder?
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Language

Original publication date

1975

Physical description

240 p.; 6.8 inches

ISBN

0330250809 / 9780330250801
Page: 0.6043 seconds