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Brentford #12

Normanghast

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"One of the rare guys who can always make me laugh"― Sir Terry Pratchett

"Stark, raving genius"― The Observer

"He becomes funnier the more you read him"― The Independent

"Douglas Adams on a sugar high"― Kirkus

"A heady mix of Flann O'Brien, Douglas Adams, Tom Sharpe and Ken Campbell, but with an inbuilt irreverence and indelicacy that is unique - and makes it the long-awaited, heavy smoker's answer to The Lord Of The Rings' ― Time Out


NEW REVISED EDITION FOR 2025

AVAILABLE ON AMAZON FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER



The third book in the final Brentford Trilogy. The twelfth book in the Brentford Quadrilogy - a series that has taken over forty years to finish.

And it's worth the wait.

The End is Nigh and things are going from bad to worser in London's favourite borough. Is there a ray of hope? Can Pooley, Omally, Professor Slocombe, Elvis Presley, Barry The Time Sprout and the other many supporting regulars of the Flying Swan save the day... and Brentford?

Well, it's a finale, after all...


First published in print in 2023, NORMANGHAST is a classic of Far Fetched Fiction, a genre created by author Robert Rankin in hopes of having his own shelf in bookstores. Now, this twelfth and final novel in the "Brentford Quadrilogy of trilogies" is released on Amazon and in Ebook format for the first time ever, by Hooded Man Media and Far-Fetched Books.

If you enjoy the works of Douglas Adams, Jasper Fforde, and Terry Pratchett, then don't miss out on NORMANGHAST and the wild imagination of Robert Rankin, and grab your copy now before the price changes!

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"⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Superbly written from the first line to the last. Hilarious, witty, tense, spine tingling, a modern and funny work that rivals Dickens and Wodehouse"

"⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Many people describe books as 'laugh out loud funny' and while they are often quite amusing, this book is the only one to have EVER made good on that promise."

"⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ I still turn to it when I need a laugh and it never disappoints."

335 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 15, 2025

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14 people want to read

About the author

Robert Rankin

60 books861 followers
"When Robert Rankin embarked upon his writing career in the late 1970s, his ambition was to create an entirely new literary genre, which he named Far-Fetched Fiction. He reasoned that by doing this he could avoid competing with any other living author in any known genre and would be given his own special section in WH Smith."
(from Web Site Story)

Robert Rankin describes himself as a teller of tall tales, a fitting description, assuming that he isn't lying about it. From his early beginnings as a baby in 1949, Robert Rankin has grown into a tall man of some stature. Somewhere along the way he experimented in the writing of books, and found that he could do it rather well. Not being one to light his hide under a bushel, Mister Rankin continues to write fine novels of a humorous science-fictional nature.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew Lawston.
Author 43 books62 followers
February 7, 2025
In some respects, Robert Rankin's Brentford has come a long way since The Antipope. In other respects, the main thing that's changed is the exact cost of a pint that John Omally or Jim Pooley push across the bar in The Flying Swan.

In Normanghast, Rankin brings in elements from some of his other books (most notably the Armageddon trilogy) to draw his 12 volume Brentford Trilogy to an apparent close. It's a lot of fun - although the presence of one character drawn closely from real life may raise a few eyebrows given very recent events.

I hope it's not the final Brentford book - but then I do still have to read 2, 3, and 4, so it's not the end for me!
946 reviews2 followers
November 26, 2025
The third book of Rankin's final Brentford Trilogy (at least for now) continues the trend of the first two with having a title that parodies a fantasy classic. The shopkeeper Norman Hartnell plays a major role, having developed an app that can distinguish good from evil. The nasty fairy Dundledots is revived by means of a new mobile phone network, and Elvis returns with Barry the Sprout. As usual with Riordan, the plot is pretty convoluted, and the book contains a lot of jokes about little sense it makes. There are a lot of references back to the author's other books, and a fitting end to the exaggerated version of the London borough.
Profile Image for Sean Keefe.
Author 7 books3 followers
December 11, 2025
In terms of Rankin’s Brentford books, this is the most far fetched gubbins of them all. Thoroughly enjoyable for anyone who’s ever followed the exploits of Pooley and Omalley. And an ending, of sorts…
Loved it!
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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