The Autobiography of a Cad
Chronicling the rise of self-proclaimed political titan Edward Percival Fox-Ingleby from Eton to Oxford and then on to Parliament, the Cad’s story contains all the hallmarks of success: university escapades with friends taking the blame, courageously signing up to be on the administrative frontline of the First World War effort and doing the decent thing and joining the Tory party in the 1920s.
Committed to ploughing his own way through life, righting the wrongs of his unforgivably liberal parents and armed with a universal disregard for the rules, the truth and the women in his life, this is Edward Fox-Ingleby, a man whom no-one loves as much as himself.
This happily fictitious memoir about serving the nation bears absolutely no relation to any politicians past, present or future.