
For sale is a fine copy of the novel, The Sound of Trumpets by John Mortimer, published in 1998 by Viking.
| Title | The Sound of Trumpets |
|---|---|
| Author | John Mortimer |
| Publisher | Viking |
| Edition | first edition, first printing |
| ISBN | 0-670-87861-8 |
| copyright year | 1998 |
| weight (kg) | 0.720 |
| height (cm) | 24 |
| width (cm) | 16 |
| pages | 273 |
| cover price £/$ | 16.99 |
The book is a first edition, first printing as evidenced by a full numberline on the copyright page.
The book has black boards and gold lettering. The boards have no knocks or signs of wear. Internally there are no marks or inscriptions. The pages are clean and white, have no tears or creases, and the binding is tight and square.
The very good wrapper is complete showing the original cover price of £16.99. There is a slight indentation on the reverse, otherwise fine.
Overall a fine copy of a novel by a popular author.
The book is not an ex library book, it has no remainder marks or publishers stamps.
This final volume in the trilogy that began with 'Paradise Postponed' and 'Titmuss Regained', sees the dawn of New Labour in the Hartscombe constituency. The embittered Lord Titmuss fondly remembers his days with Thatcher, and sees in the New Labour candidate the perfect instrument for revenge.

JOHN MORTIMER is a novelist, playwright and former practising barrister. Among his many publications are several volumes of Rumpole stories and a trilogy of political novels (PARADISE POSTPONED, TITMUSS REGAINED and THE SOUND OF TRUMPETS) featuring Leslie Titmuss - a character as brilliant as Rumpole. John Mortimer received a knighthood for his services to the arts in 1998.
From Publishers Weekly
Simply because England's political tides have turned from Tory Thatcherism to Blairite New Labour does not mean that Mortimer's Machiavellian Leslie Titmuss will be any less entertainingly scheming than in Paradise Postponed or Titmuss Regained. Although Titmuss has retired from Whitehall to write his dreaded tell-all memoirs, he takes a keen interest in Terry Flitton, Labour's candidate for the newly open parliamentary seat for the districts of Hartscombe and Worsfield South. Titmuss sees in Flitton an instrument of revenge against the party that betrayed his beloved Iron Lady, while Flitton, to his dismay, realizes that Titmuss possesses the killer political instincts that he lacks and needs. Mortimer, though a Labour voter, is a bipartisan satirist, skewering with equal enthusiasm both parties' rhetoric and campaign tactics. Flitton's farcical, accidental enlistment in the B-list local fox hunt not only provides a hilarious chase sequence, but also slyly dislodges conservative and contemporary mores. Flitton, however, should not be mistaken for a Blairite politician. It is precisely his old-fashioned ideals that are at odds with his success at the polls, his tenure in the new government and his downfall when Titmuss claims his Mephistophelian fee. At once lighthearted and cold-blooded, The Sound of Trumpets amusingly completes Mortimer's trilogy on modern Britain's rocky, convoluted political landscape.
| UK 1st class £ | UK 2nd Class £ | Europe Airmail £ | World Airmail £ | World Surface £ | |
| 0.140 - 0.389 kg | 2.79 | 2.50 | 4.20 | 7.18 | 4.20 |
| 0.390 - 0.639 kg | 3.30 | 2.91 | 5.52 | 9.95 | 5.87 |
| 0.640 - 0.889 kg | 3.88 | 3.39 | 6.62 | 12.25 | 7.21 |
| 0.890 - 1.139 kg | 5.05 | 4.96 | 7.66 | 14.49 | 8.53 |