Equal parts workplace comedy, home invasion thriller and literary conundrum, The Royal Free is an exuberant, dark, wildly entertaining novel about death and copy editing - by the author of the acclaimed A Mistake.
James
Ballard is a recently bereaved single father to a baby daughter, and a
medical editor tasked with saving the 'third oldest medical journal in
the world', the Royal London Journal of Medicine, from the
mistakes no one else notices - the misplaced apostrophes, the Freudian
misspelling, the wrong subtype of an influenza strain (H2N1 or H5N1?).
His job is utterly boring, but - or so he tells himself - totally
crucial: the Royal London is a stronghold of care for the human body, a
bastion of humanism in a disintegrating world. In the London outside of
the office, the prognosis for the body politic is bad: civic unrest is
poised on the brink of riots.
Attempting
to grieve for his lost young wife, while haunted by a group of violent
North London teenagers in a collapsing city, James is brought to crisis.