‘The best vicar ever’ Caitlin Moran
‘Sex, drugs, death, religion, more sex… it has got it all’ Guardian
FATHOMLESS RICHES is the Reverend Richard Coles’ warm, witty and wise memoir in which he divulges with searing honesty and intimacy his pilgrimage from a rock-and-roll life of sex and drugs in the Communards to one devoted to God and Christianity.
‘All the humour, quirky characters and incidents that life – and death- serve up’ Mail on Sunday
‘One of the most immensely readable – and redeemable – memoirs of the year’ Sunday Times
‘A frank, worldly-wise, bleakly comic memoir’ The Times
‘Full of wit and humour ‘ Independent on Sunday
‘Sex, drugs, death, religion, more sex… it has got it all’ Guardian
FATHOMLESS RICHES is the Reverend Richard Coles’ warm, witty and wise memoir in which he divulges with searing honesty and intimacy his pilgrimage from a rock-and-roll life of sex and drugs in the Communards to one devoted to God and Christianity.
‘All the humour, quirky characters and incidents that life – and death- serve up’ Mail on Sunday
‘One of the most immensely readable – and redeemable – memoirs of the year’ Sunday Times
‘A frank, worldly-wise, bleakly comic memoir’ The Times
‘Full of wit and humour ‘ Independent on Sunday
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Reviews
Beautifully written, disarmingly frank and utterly charming
Sex, drugs, death, religion, more sex, many more deaths - it has got it all. Like a sparkling old-style chasuble worn by a Spanish priest, it is difficult to ignore
Richard's devastating honesty makes his journey from gay pop-star to celibate parish priest comprehensible even to atheists
Richard Coles has achieved a rare thing in writing an astonishingly honest autobiography, which, alongside the sex and drugs, presents Christian faith in a way that will surely be invitingly intriguing to an audience well beyond the church ... An immensely enjoyable memoir, whether a reader's primary interest is the music industry, the impact of AIDS, the Church of England, or a wonderfully Anglican combination of all three.
He writes with charm and erudition and his take on 1980s Britain is fascinating
Full of wit and humour about finding god, and Jimmy Somerville.
It is a tale of redemption and of a sinner come to transformation... The Church of England is all the better for having such a priest within its ranks.
One of the most immensely readable - and redeemable - memoirs of the year. His book is an engaging account of eccentricity, curiosity and a profound spiritual journey. I give it a screamingly camp, happy-clappy thumbs up
[O]ne of the most readable memoirs of 2014
Witty, honest and - no pun intended - irreverent, it is very much a personal and at times heartbreaking account about what it was like to be gay during the period with a bit of pop-world gossip thrown in as well. Readable to say the least.