Author:Martin Jameson,Jonathan Keeble,Richard Deke,Adonis James Anthony,Armand Beasley

A contemporary BBC Radio 3 drama about the events that occur to a man after he snaps one day at work. 'The First Day of the Rest of My Life' stars Jonathan Keeble as the protagonist, and was originally broadcast as part of 'The Wire' collection of dramas on 10 October 2009, and repeated on 2 October 2010. Toby has a bad day at work on the phones for Careless, the household cover people. When an angry customer pushes him too far, he snaps and tells him to have a heart attack and die. The next morning he wakes up as Dr Richard Jugg. And the next day as a homeless person called Deke. How are these events connected? And where will this nightmarish journey end? 'The Wire' is BBC Radio 3's showcase for works that push the boundaries of drama and narrative. 'The First Day of the Rest of My Life' features Jonathan Keeble as Toby, Richard, Deke and Clive; Andonis James Anthony as Craig and Scott; and Armand Beasley as Tariq and Naz. Also included in the cast are Sue Jenkins, Melissa Jane Sinden and Catherine Kinsella. Directed by Gary Brown.
Very, very funny... It is an utter delight, astute and knowing. Wonderful writing
—— Sarah Winman, author of WHEN GOD WAS A RABBITStrauss writes with poise and comic timing. His prose is formal and correct; he establishes a tone of laconic regret yet sustains a striking lightness of touch particularly in passages of dialogue...It is, above all, rich in symbols and subtexts
—— Eileen Battersby , Irish TimesSmart, charming, funny, highly astute and subtly political. A really terrific read
—— Douglas CouplandWarner navigates the comic, the philosophical and the socially acute like no other writer we have
—— IndependentVigorous and uncannily convincing... Readers would be sorry if Warner were to have finished with these characters
—— Daily TelegraphYou don't have to have read The Sopranos to make sense of The Stars in the Bright Sky, or to be instantly hooked by it
—— ObserverHighly-crafted, often beautiful writing
—— Irish TimesReaders would be sorry if Warner were to have finished with these characters
—— Tim Martin , Daily TelegraphThe author of The Sopranos catches up with the same cast of party-going wild girls, all beautifully imagined in pitch-perfect social satire
—— The Sunday Times Summer ReadingThis entertaining comedy of manners
—— Adrian Turpin , Financial TimesWarner's comic depictions of the multiple tensions that run through the group finds its masterstroke in the grotesquely deluded yet impossible to dislike Manda, who is a neat satirical cipher for modern celebrity-obsessed culture. Terrific
—— MetroWarner puts these very flesh-and-blood girls into locations of almost J G Ballardish sterility, with sodium lamps, flyovers and neon-signed hotels, all described beautifully. The way he manages to inhabit his gang of girls with such gusto is one of the small miracles of contemporary fiction
—— Phil Baker , Sunday TimesPitch-perfect dialogue elevates this exhilarating, genuinely inspired novel into something that is, in Manda's phrase, 'dead brilliant'
—— Stephanie Cross , Daily MailEmbedded in an unflinching portrayal or working-class femininity - all binge-drinking, chain-smoking, shrieking vulgarity and copious vomiting - is a brilliant anatomy of shifting group dynamics, many nods to Beckett's waiting games, and a sly engagement with Ballard's reading of airport space as the ultimate home of deracinated modernity
—— Chris Ross , GuardianWarner is fascinated by the strange domesticity of 'non-places', and occasionally cranks up the alienation to describe their fixtures - literally, the light fixtures, room numbers and air-conditioning units - with a nouveau roman blankness... The most striking passages of the novel are in this clunky yet exoticising register, which inverts the technique of The Sopranos by making the warmth and fluency of the gang seem contained by the proprieties of adulthood. It brings with it a control-tower angle of vision that subtly distorts familiar language...
—— London Review of BooksBeautifully imagined in a pitch-perfect social satire
—— Sunday Times, Summer Reading






