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Sadie Jones

1957, and Lewis Aldridge is travelling back to his home in the South of England. He is straight out of jail and nineteen years old. His return will trigger the implosion not just of his family, but of a whole community. A decade earlier, his father s homecoming casts a different shape. The war is over and Gilbert has recently been demobbed. He reverts easily to suburban life cocktails at six thirty, church on Sundays but his wife and young son resist the stuffy routine. Lewis and his mother escape to the woods for picnics, just as they did in wartime days. Nobody is surprised that Gilbert…

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About Sadie Jones

Sadie Jones lives in London. The Outcast is her first novel.

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About the Book

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Sadie Jones interview/review

When I began the book I thought that the process would be very different, but many of the decisions and aims are the same: what is left out and what is left in, and trying to tell a story so that it lives.

  1. The Outcast is set in the 1950s, what made you choose this era as a background for the book?

The decision to put the story in the 1950s was one of the earliest ones, along with who Lewis was, and where it would be set. I needed to isolate Lewis entirely – 1950s Surrey seemed the obvious place to do it. Also, I have always loved the fifties, and the films and books of that period.

  1. Lewis is a very troubled yet charismatic young man, do you think you would like him if you met him in real life?

That’s a very hard question to answer, because I don’t see Lewis from the outside, so imagining meeting him is odd! I think I would like him, though, if he wasn’t in one of his entirely silent moods.

  1. Some of the scenes in the book, particularly those between Gilbert and Lewis are very poignant, did you find these upsetting to write?

I found a lot of the book upsetting to write, but writers are also fairly ruthless about what they put their characters through.

  1. Psychology and human behavior are very central themes to the book, is this an area that you’ve always been interested in?

I think if you write about human relationships you’re always exploring the psyche and the soul. I don’t separate certain perhaps more extreme – things that people do from others.

  1. Alcohol is at the heart of the novel and the root cause or effect of many of the problems that are raised in it, is this an issue that you purposefully set out to raise?

Again, I never thought in terms of issues, but yes, alcohol is in many ways one of the the main characters in story. Drinking, like ways of expressing love, or violence, is passed down through families.

  1. You capture the voices and concerns of children, especially in the voice of young Kit, extremely well, did you conjure them from your own childhood experiences or from watching your children?

I think that we are all much closer to our childhood selves than we often think, so when we read about childhood it can surprise us how immediate or moving it is, when perhaps those feelings are just there, waiting to be accessed all the time. Also, I loved Kit, and felt very close to her. I don’t consciously use my own life or experience at all.

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Starting Points for Discussion

  • Sadie Jones worked as a screenwriter for fifteen years – do you think this is reflected in her writing?
  • Do you think Gilbert is jealous of Lizzie and Lewis’s strong bond?
  • “He thought there must be something wrong with a person who would rather be in Brixton prison than their own home.” Do you agree with Lewis in this statement? Why do you think he feels this way?
  • Both Gilbert and Dick seem to bully their families. Do you think that they behave in this way because they consider it to be socially acceptable?
  • What parallels can you draw between Kit and Lewis’s childhood experiences?
  • Do you think either Lizzie or Alice married Gilbert for love? How do you think he feels about them?
  • Do you think Lewis ever really reciprocates Kit’s feelings?
  • Do you think that the issues raised in the novel could have been resolved if they had just talked to each other? Would this have been possible with the 1950s social restraints?
  • How do you think Waterford and its residents have changed when Lewis returns from prison?
  • How do you think attitudes towards some of the issues raised in the book have changed since the 1950s. Look at: Alcohol Self-harm Church
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Other Books by Sadie Jones

  • Small Wars

    Hal Treherne is a young and dedicated soldier on the brink of a brilliant c…

    Buy Now

  • The Outcast

    1957, and Lewis Aldridge is travelling back to his home in the South of England…

    Reading Guide

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Suggested Further Reading

  • Atonement ~ Ian McEwan – read our guide
  • Tess of the d’Ubervilles ~ Thomas Hardy
  • Of Mice and Men ~ John Steinbeck
  • To Kill A Mockingbird ~ Harper Lee – read our guide
  • Revolutionary Road ~ Richard Yates – read our guide

RECOMMENDED FILMS

  • Rebel without a Cause ~ Nicholas Ray, 1955
  • The Wild One ~ László Benedek, 1953
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