This book was written by John Niven, a Scottish writer who became famous for his incredible ability to mix serious storytelling and bad language.
"The sunshine cruise company" tells of a group of elderly women, say between 60 and 90 years old, who do not give up on inactivity and decide to rob a bank. The brilliant idea comes to Susan, the youngest (or less oldest) of the group, who, due to the death of her husband from a heart attack, suddenly is on the verge of economic ruin. This bad turn in Susan's tranquil life occurs when her husband is found dead in a basement used as a place for fetish erotic games; obviously she knew nothing about it (her husband Barry was a quiet accountant ...) and she will find out that Barry had a double life. His death leaves Susan in debt and now the bank is about to take away her house.
The other ladies of the group are Julie, a bit under the age of seventy, for whom life has not been easy between failures and bad relationships, and who now lives alone in a rented flat and cleans in a retirement home ; Jill, a slightly rigid and perfect woman, who hates vulgarities and bad words, with a seriously ill grandchild and who does not have the money to pay for the operation that could save him; and then there is Ethel, the oldest, the most hilarious, the most libidinous and the most open-minded of the group, with a past that is perceived to be lived very intensely and that still today has no desire to die in a nursing home. Just know that she goes around with a motorized wheelchair on the back of which there is a sticker that says "no brakes"….
The other two protagonists of the plot are Inspector Boscombe, impetuous, insensitive, clumsy and his subordinate, Agent Wesley, who tries to repair the wrongdoings of his boss.
The book soon develops into a daring hunt for fugitives, between England and France and during which we will also meet other strange and funny characters. Why do friends turn into fugitives? Because wanting to financially help Susan, they decide to study a plan to rob the bank that wants to take Susan's house away. One day while Susan was arguing with the bank manager she had noticed that the proceeds of a supermarket were brought to the bank same time same day every week; one night, half drunk, Susan and Julie start talking about the past and Julie tells of when, traveling around the world between Australia and America, she met a guy who looked like an actor and who had a strange nickname, Stigmata, specialized, coincidentally, in bank robberies. The idea begins to make its way into Susan's mind, but she is a correct person and some scruples come to her, but now the process has started and the idea of a robbery with the support of a ninety-year-old ex convict with an oxygen cylinder on the back, who alternates mouthfuls of oxygen with ferocious cigar strokes, will become increasingly evident. Stigmata still has an old arsenal of weapons and various gadgets including strange black balaclavas suitable for the purpose.
And then, who would think that a group of sixty-year-olds and a ninety-year-old woman in a wheelchair hidden behind balaclavas in worker's clothes could really do a robbery? Everyone will think of a joke, especially seeing Ethel in her wheelchair, but they will immediately change their face when the old woman pulls out from under a plaid nothing less than a sawn-off shotgun.
Previously, Inspector Boscombe, determined but a little stupid, had had to deal with Susan a couple of times: the first when he had given her the news of Barry's discovery and the second when he had brought back Barry's personal effects , just when Susan and her friends were discussing the details of the robbery.
On the day of the robbery Boscombe is eating an ice cream near the Bank and when he sees the thieves load a woman in a wheelchair into the van to escape, he remembers having already seen her at Susan's house. This is where the adventurous pursuit between England and the French Riviera begins, full of unlikely episodes and hilarious misunderstandings, until the final epilogue.
It is a very funny novel, with all the features of Niven: a good dose of vulgarity, which associated with these elderly protagonists produces a truly exhilarating effect; an exaggerated story, bordering on the absurd; a stupid but possible policeman. But also important issues: personal bankruptcy, the desire to take back your life, never to give up, the illness, the lack of money. It is certainly also a book on friendship, and its importance when you are old. A fun, engaging story, suitable for anyone who wants to spend a few hours without heavy thoughts. To laugh, but also to think.