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  • Call Billy 07471949129: A psychological contemporary drama: have you called Billy yet?

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Call Billy 07471949129: A psychological contemporary drama: have you called Billy yet? Kindle Edition

3.9 out of 5 stars (26)

A compelling psychological contemporary drama. Edinburgh is meant to be a new start for the Gillespie family. Rachel has enrolled as a mature student at the university, while Andrew is spending more time with the kids. But Rachel’s ‘new start’ morphs into ‘new affair’ with fellow student Ryan. Or is it Stevie? Either way, her lover is not what he seems. When his past surfaces in the guise of a name on Rachel’s library ticket, the affair turns nasty. And then her teenage daughter unwittingly discovers the deceit and the family begins its spin into free fall. Have you called Billy yet? He will answer your call: he's in a panic, in a pub and he's been trying to get hold of his old mate, Stevie, to warn him ... Call now: 07899 232007 Winner of Arts Council Bursary for New Writers. 'Thank fuck someone still has the balls ...' Richard Bradburn editorial.ie. Gritty, hard hitting, honest, and very funny ... Excerpt: I gallop on, this time swerving sharply from words like honesty or openness, and start recounting some half-arsed story that The Sun fabricated in Friday’s paper. I explode into laughter. The freaky finger is back, but wagging this time, none of that accusatory pointing business, waggling and wagging. And so’s Megan – not wagging, no – laughing – she’s laughing. Blimey, that’s so great – I haven’t laughed since, since … and then I say sort of tagged onto the laughter, in a voice that I disown – totally and wholly disown, ‘and another funny thing – I mean you’re really, really going to find this funny: because, perhaps in just the same way that you choose dickheads who don’t last, I see fit to bury my head in the sand about my wife.’ She’s beginning to look anxious but now I’ve begun I can’t stop. ‘And you know how?’ An almost imperceptible movement of her head to the left suggests that perhaps I should leave it at that. No chance. ‘So get this – the real reason Rachel’s been on such cracking form is that she’s been having an affair – I mean, don’t you just love that? ’Oh fuck. I had absolutely no intention of doing that. I glance at my watch. I try to say something, but my gums merely form a careless square around bared teeth. It’s as if I’ve undone the only nut on the only bolt that holds up the Eiffel Tower, but hey, there’s always a slight chance that it can stay up without it, at least until the wind blows or someone leans out or, or some idiot – yep, here it comes … Excerpt: Better not wake Mum. She wasn’t in till five – I know, because I watched the eye of her cigarette winking and flaring and then jolting in the dark as she crashed into a chair in my room. When she’s totally off her trolley, it’s not just the furniture she thwacks. Sometimes she thumps into the remains of her motherly instincts and decides to check up on me. And I wish to fuck she wouldn’t.

Product description

Review

THE SCOTSMAN: Real, raw and emotionally resonant, narrated with heart and levity, readers will wonder how the Gillespie family are doing long after they’ve put the book down for the final time. Have you called Billy yet?

'Call Billy is a gritty, hard-hitting novel, an Isla Dewar with a huge amount of attitude.' --Robin Pilcher, best selling author of Starburst.

GLASGOW HERALD (Alastair Mabbott): Call Billy 07899232007 isn’t an autobiographical novel, but it has been shaped and informed by McColl’s experiences of growing up in a violent household, being orphaned and undergoing years of therapy to unlearn old coping strategies. Consequently, she shows a rare insight into the dynamics of a dysfunctional household and, crucially, the sense of proximity to both psychological and physical harm. Written with a great deal of emotional intelligence and honesty, Call Billy is a novel that doesn’t pull its punches, in which every development proceeds from the last with a horrible, gut-punching inevitability.

'I finished it and immediately wanted to start again. It's a captivating family drama - a compelling plot with emotional insight, great depth and so beautifully written. I found myself thinking about this book for days after I finished it.' --Dr Nell Leadbetter (clinical psychologist).

'Rich, easy, fluent, elliptical, sinewy language follows thought and feeling ... the real McCoy.' --Tony Bianchi, New Writers' Bursary judge, Scottish Arts Council.

About the Author

I'm the younger of two sisters. We were raised in a family hushed and stunted by the threat of violence and became orphans when I was just twelve and she fifteen.

I would like to acknowledge something here, something which I couldn't see at the time. No child is ever responsible for a parent's violence, ever.

For many years I wished she'd stop challenging him. I thought we'd have peace if she did. But the violence was his, not hers, she was a child looking for love, like we all were.

Our parents were killed in a car accident on their way back from a party one Saturday night and we were woken on Sunday morning by two policemen at the front door. We neither went to their funeral nor discussed them again, in fact we began a new school less than forty-eight hours after the crash. The occupants of the other car were fined a few thousand pounds for drunk driving, a fact I discovered while flicking through a local newspaper, some months later.

We spent what remained of our childhood with our aunt's family and it didn't work out well.

Children do what they can to be happy, and I kept a low profile. Keeping my sister on an even keel was all-consuming. One false step or wrong word and she would certainly bring my world to a stop, but far worse than that, she and my father created a war zone which excluded my mother and I as we watched uselessly from the side-lines.

I both loved and feared my sister and I continued to both love and fear the people I grew close to, for many years. Eventually, with little sign of things calming down, I went into therapy and began to understand the vital part I played in the continuing soap opera that was my life. It wasnae me officer just didn't cut it. It was me, just as much as it was the people I chose (after all I was an adult wasn't I?) to surround myself with, and if I wanted a different life, it was me that had to change.

I gave up cigarettes, my sister and my husband, cold turkey. It was the most painful thing I've ever done, like losing the reason to live. I could never have done it without intense professional support.

Leave this paragraph out if you are averse to therapy speak! Between us we built what in the trade is sometimes called a strong and nurturing inner-parent . Once that was done we asked her to draw up some strong boundaries for my so-called inner child . This took months. It's a bit like saying to a child I know you're thirsty, but coke will rot your teeth, how about a glass of spring water. You may even grow to like it and you definitely won't miss the toothache. And I didn't. Don't.

Finding myself with nothing to fear created a huge scary space in my life and very slowly I began to fill it with healthy options. And eventually I began to write.

With little meaningful education, it took two decades to understand and learn the art of storytelling and the process has changed my life. Amazingly I found an agent for my first novel, but it didn't sell and since then I've had three agents, including the giants, United Agents.

I have completed two novels and am about to start the second draft of a new one. In case any of you are wondering, I've not written my own story. I find that if I come close to characters I've known, I lose my unbiased observation as a writer. But I do know what it's like to be too afraid to breathe, to straddle a wire fence, unable to decide which side to fall onto - broken glass or upturned nails, full to the brim with the futile hope that I won't be hurt this time. I know what it's like to watch someone you love beg to be battered. And these experiences have helped me, sometimes, find a truth for my characters.

Over the years, I've supported vulnerable adults in a variety of ways within various charitable organisations.

I have three grown-up children, and live between Tarbert and Edinburgh with my husband.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07BTCW4VT
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ McEllisons
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 1 May 2018
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ 1st
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1.1 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 377 pages
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 15 - 18 years
  • Best Sellers Rank: 1,475,479 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
  • Customer reviews:
    3.9 out of 5 stars (26)

About the author

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Sam Ellison
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Raised in a family hushed and stunted by the threat of violence, my sister and I became orphans when I was just twelve. My parents were killed in a car accident on their way back from a party one Saturday night and we were woken on Sunday morning by two policemen at the front door.

We neither went to their funeral nor discussed them again. The occupants of the other car were fined a few thousand pounds for drunk driving, a fact I discovered while flicking through a local newspaper. We spent what remained of our childhood with our aunt’s family and it didn’t work out well.

Children do what they can to be happy, and I kept a low profile, devoting my waking hours to keeping my sister on an even keel. I both loved and feared her and I continued to both love and fear the people I drew into my life for many years.

Call Billy 07471949129 took me four years to write and is not my story, though my story has helped me see life through the eyes of my characters. I’m now preparing to publish my second novel, Summer and getting down to editing a third one. I live between a shack on the coast by Tarbert, Argyll and Edinburgh.

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
26 global ratings

Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 September 2018
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    I wouldn’t normally write a review, but this book compelled me to. This story doesn’t shy away from anything. Its gritty, dark in places, and, for want of a better word, real. Exceptionally well written and takes you along on the journey. I look forward to her next book!
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 February 2020
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    Dark and depressing and it didn't flow for me. I struggled to keep reading it but I wanted to know what happened. Even the ending wasn't great. And you didn't really get much information on Billy and his cronies.

    Surprised at all the good reviews.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 November 2019
    Format: Paperback
    As a portrait of gritty urban life and family dysfunction this bleak novel has a lot going for it. The story of a family in melt-down with a cast of unsavoury characters, it tackles some serious issues – abuse, domestic violence, drugs, alcohol, dementia – but the dysfunction is so unremitting and so persistent that ultimately the book lost its edge for me. The characters lurch from one crisis to another with no respite and no reflection, and they are all so feckless, so consistently making bad decisions that I lost patience with the whole sorry shower of them. The story is told from multiple perspectives, which is effective in allowing everyone a voice, but for me their voices all sounded similarly self-obsessed and if the chapters hadn't been headed with the name of the character speaking it would have been hard to differentiate them at times. The frenetic nature of the narrative doesn’t allow the reader to really get inside the characters’ minds and I would have appreciated more reflection and less action. However, that said, I stuck with it and felt that the author had achieved her aim in showing us a slice of contemporary life at a particular time and place.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 May 2022
    Format: Paperback
    I really enjoyed this page-turner, whose characters resonated deeply with me. The structure and the prose is sharp and it moves along briskly. I loved the witty gimmick that you can actually call Billy using the number on the cover! Ingenious!
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 31 May 2018
    Format: Paperback
    The cover initially drew me into this novel and the captivating plot, full of mystery and drama, recommended novel.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 June 2021
    Format: Paperback
    This is a brilliant, challenging read.
    All the characters damaged, fragile or sane are totally believable no matter how bizarre their behaviour and decisions.
    Abi ,and who is in the latter category ,is a 15 year old girl who's internal dialogue will stay with me, veering between insightful, funny and heart-rending.
    I normally pass on books I enjoy to family and friends but not this one. I'll be reading it again. Its a keeper . Buy your own.
    Brian Venters.
    It's a keeper reading it again
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 July 2018
    Format: Kindle Edition
    A brilliant read - completely gripped from beginning to end and intrigued by the complex family dynamics which make this book so unique! Especially loved calling Billy! I would recommend this book highly.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 June 2018
    Format: Paperback
    Emotional hard hitting well written drew me right in.Found it hard to put down&stayed on my mind when I read the last pages.

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