In 1985 London, 14-year-old Billy March and his working-class parents are 'evicted' from the city to make way for a new road network and are placed in a rented property in the new town of Invicta Cross. Billy is upset - no library to speak of, no cinema and nowhere to go or do - and the neighbours are all middle class families who keep themselves to themselves. His peers at school ignore him and he only finds two friends - funeral director's son Oliver and 'weird girl' April - both misfits like himself. The family's attempts to settle into their new life and involve themselves in the community are thwarted at every turn and it seems there is a conspiracy against the family. Laugh-out-loud moments of descriptions and speech blend with darker humour and spiteful acts perpetrated against Billy's family until the ultimate pain that affected Billy's life forever. The second part of the book is set in 1995 - 10 years on, most of the families are still resident in Invicta Cross but, although on the face of it everything is still harmonious, there are already undercurrents caused by the financial crisis and negative equity. When a good-looking new couple move onto the estate, they are instantly popular with everyone. But then the vicious pranks start, setting neighbour against neighbour, and the tale gets even darker as people start to disappear. A cracking tale of class differences, yuppies and revenge, darkly funny and vicious, wonderfully entertaining and very different - 10/10 for me!