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Indecent Exposure
Indecent Exposure
Jan 16, 2026 9:46 AM

Author:Tom Sharpe

Indecent Exposure

In Piemburgem, the deceptively peaceful-looking capital of Zululand, Kommandant van Heerden, Konstabel Els and Luitenant Verkramp continue to terrorise true Englishman and even truer Zulus in their relentless search for a perfect South Africa.

Kommandant van Heerden, that great Anglophile, gropes his way towards attaining true 'Englishness' in the company of the eccentric Dornford Yates Club. But Luitenant Verkramp, whose hatred of all things English is surpassed only by his fear of sex, sets in motion an experiment in mass chastity (with the help of a lady psychiatrist), which has remarkable and quite unforeseen results.

Reviews

Explosively funny, fiendishly inventive

—— Sunday Times

Splendidly funny

—— New Statesman

What clinches the novel's success is Mr Sharpe's brilliant comic style. His phrasing, his timing, and his extraordinarily deft handling of the minutiae of comic incidents make for real hilarity

—— Times Literary Supplement

Britain's leading practitioner of black humour

—— Punch

There’s almost no one funnier

—— Observer

Then is a devastatingly dark story, and the hypnotic quality of its writing, and the searing vision it lays before us, certainly appear to have sprung from a deep and frightening source

—— Rosemary Goring , Sunday Herald

The eeriness of the world outside is conveyed well; as are the horrors that beset the survivors... It is highly readable and involving, offering tantalising clues as the reader tries to navigate the grisly streets of London and the dark corners of the narrator's mind...but the central human narrative is strong and clear, proving that even in darkness there are points of light

—— Philip Womack , Daily Telegraph

One of Myerson's strength's lies in creating atmosphere... Myerson sees the pathos in small details

—— Independent

At first this genre-bending novel feels like a departure for Myerson, but familiar themes kick in – injured children, broken homes, psychological torment. It’s a chilling and original portrait of breakdown

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent

Myerson displays a deft touch at providing the reader with telling, troubling details, clues to what might have happened. Unremittingly bleak, Then is a novel about memory as a woman tries to piece together the fragments of her past

—— Tina Jackson , Metro

A really compelling story

—— Lesley McDowell , Independent on Sunday
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