Late one summer evening, Wilberforce – rich, young, and work-obsessed  – makes a detour on his way home to the vast undercroft of Caerlyon Hall, and the domain of Francis Black, a place where wine, hospitality and affection flow freely.
Through Francis, Wilberforce is initiated into a life rich in the promise of friendship and adventure, where, through his new set of friends, the possibility of finding acceptance, and even falling in love, seems finally to be within his reach.
Wilberforce becomes a willing pupil to Francis, and in the cellars of Caerlyon he nurtures a new-found passion for wine. But even the finest wine can leave a bitter aftertaste, and Wilberforce will learn the undercroft’s unpalatable secrets, and that passion comes at a price …
Read by David Rintoul
(p) 2008 Orion Publishing Group
			Through Francis, Wilberforce is initiated into a life rich in the promise of friendship and adventure, where, through his new set of friends, the possibility of finding acceptance, and even falling in love, seems finally to be within his reach.
Wilberforce becomes a willing pupil to Francis, and in the cellars of Caerlyon he nurtures a new-found passion for wine. But even the finest wine can leave a bitter aftertaste, and Wilberforce will learn the undercroft’s unpalatable secrets, and that passion comes at a price …
Read by David Rintoul
(p) 2008 Orion Publishing Group
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Reviews
			[The plot] provides Torday with copious opportunities for comedy, which he readily exploits.  But there is a serious undertone		
					
			
			Slips down a treat		
					
			
			What makes us want to find out about Wilberforce is Torday's wonderful prose - the same simple, clear writing that made Salmon Fishing so readable		
					
			
			Torday's confidence in his story's power to command attention is not misplaced...Wilberforce is well worth sampling		
					
			
			A well-told tale...Torday wryly observes Wilberforce's descent		
					
			
			The whole book is delightfully written...Paul Torday is a remarkably original novelist		
					
			
			Grows more and more poignant as the novel progresses.. satisfyingly full-bodied and slips down a treat		
					
			
			He has a good feeling for character and a sly sense of humour		
					
			
			Remarkably, given the bleakness of both subject and hero, it is an incredibly good read		
					
			
			Exceptionally accomplished.. second novels are notoriously difficult to pull off but Torday has managed a near masterpiece		
					
			
			A heart-wrenching tale of alcoholism and a lonely man's search for identity...a mesmerising page-turner		
					
			
			Telling the story back-to-front allows Torday to highlight Wilberforce's self-delusion; he's that familiar figure, the alcoholic who pretends that he's merely a connoisseur		
					
			 
	
	