Coast of Teeth

Travels to English Seaside Towns in an Age of Anxiety

Tom Sykes author Louis Netter illustrator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Signal Books Ltd

Published:1st Sep '23

Should be back in stock very soon

Coast of Teeth cover

The English seaside has long been seductive. For 200 years, punters have sought out its quirky thrills from bingo to Wurlitzer organ dances, glamorous granny parades to child-jockeyed donkey races, lewdly shaped rock candy to harrowingly bad karaoke. But recently, many seaside towns have been pummelled by poverty, unemployment, underinvestment, addiction, Brexit, Covid-19 and the climate emergency. Writer Tom Sykes and illustrator Louis Netter take you on a Gonzo tour of 21 English coastal communities in an age of anxiety and absurdity. Their encounters are comical, sad, weird and beguiling - sometimes all at once. A post-lockdown beach party turns violent in Bournemouth. The Hampshire shores pile up with plastic waste and sewage dumped by a water company. St Osyth and Jaywick's trailer parks and makeshift homes have come to resemble a Global Southern shanty town. Covid disinformation is daubed on walls and benches across the Dorset coast. A pub in Scarborough celebrates Ulster paramilitarism. Portsmouthians come to terms with the imperial past. A Blackpudlian musician confesses an intimate connection to the serial killer Harold Shipman. But there's good news too. Combers and mudlarkers are cleaning our beaches. Art projects are drawing attention to coastal erosion and other ecological menaces. In an increasingly uniform England of red-brick estates and retail parks, seaside towns might just be our last outposts of eccentricity and individuality.

'An enjoyable read. The illustrations have a mutant Donald McGill vibe.'-- Will Self; ‘This is a unique book . . . [with] a rigorous sense of the reasons for economic and cultural decline. . . This is a very radical book, but it is never propagandist or dull. It made me laugh aloud several times: the plight of the observers is very well drawn. It left me wanting more: more piers, more takeaways, more grubby stopovers.’—The London Magazine; ‘Immersively gonzo, febrile and slapstick, written with the gusto of a gourmand relishing a (beggars’) banquet.’—Panorama: The Journal of Travel, Place and Nature; ‘The mix of forensic observation of people by Sykes and the sketches by the very talented Louis Netter makes for a very unusual book indeed. . . If you want to read a very different travelogue of Britain then this is a brilliant place to start.’—Half Man, Half Book

ISBN: 9781838463076

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

146 pages