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  • Published: 1 September 2010
  • ISBN: 9781409077893
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

Wildlife




Viciously funny, brave, challenging and hugely topical, this novel from Joe Stretch takes us on an unforgettable journey to a frighteningly familiar world. Are you ready?

Are you ready to come together?

Are you tired of typing out your interests and hyping up the details of your everyday life? Imagine then a social network that touches and loves, sweats and farts. Imagine romance in real time. Imagine humans licking rather than double clicking each other. Imagine the Wild World. Are you ready to come together?

Lonely, horny and young, Janek, Anka, Roger and Joe find themselves being dragged out of their isolated existences and towards the promise of a perfect future - in the Wild World. Sex lives and real lives and written lives merge and tangle like wires until reality begins to crumble and the sky falls in...

  • Published: 1 September 2010
  • ISBN: 9781409077893
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

About the author

Joe Stretch

Joe Stretch was born in 1982 and brought up in Lancashire. He moved to Manchester at the age of 18 to study politics at Manchester University. His band, Performance, in which he is lead singer and lyricist, released their debut album in 2007.

Also by Joe Stretch

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Praise for Wildlife

Facebook mindfuck for the bollocks generation. I loved every funny, filthy word of it

Nicholas Royle

Wildlife is hilarious, frightening and bonkers, like forcing a sheet of blotter acid into your computer's floppy-disk slot... Stretch's second outing finds the author somewhere between a demented, devilish David Attenborough and William S. Burroughs, exposing the disgraceful, manic behaviour of the strangest of all living creatures: ourselves

Richard Milward

It is heartening to discover that the contemporary novel can still do amazing things... A serious meditation on technology and individualism. Ballardian in scope, and equally as exciting as his brutal debut

Lee Rourke, Independent