The Romantic Tragedies of a Drama King by Harry Trevaldwyn
Book of the Week: 9 February 2025
Patrick Simmons (Patch) is starting the new school year with a plan – to find a boyfriend by the time Prom comes around. His school, Hiverhampton High, doesn’t actually hold a prom but the Drama Club he belongs to puts on a party after their first big show of the year, so that will have to do. Aided and abetted by his endlessly supportive best friend Jean, he sets out to impress the two new members of Drama Club – Peter and Sam – who he thinks have boyfriend potential. He might not be a member of his school’s Lodge Crew (‘… what the cool group call themselves because they sometimes vape outside the Holiday Lodge in town.’) but he has style (what could be more of a statement than wearing a giant wooden surfboard necklace that he bought in a Devon giftshop to school?), he is well-read (pretends to read Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen in the local coffee shop) and has sophisticated taste (he and Jean create new recipes such as ‘mushroom, olive and Rice-Krispies blitzed on a bed of baby gem lettuce’ and ‘mashed potato sandwich with balsamic vinegar’).
Despite Patch’s alarming levels of self-confidence (often balanced out by an excrucating lack of self-awareness) is he capable of navigating Drama Club’s production of Sweeney Todd, dealing with his sworn enemies and finding a date in time for Prom? With Jean’s advice from her ‘actual committed relationship experience’ of five whole weeks, some reluctant life coaching from his former English teacher, the patience of his long-suffering Drama teacher Ms Jenkins and plenty of input from new friends, he might just succeed.
Laugh-out-loud is an over-used description, but this book definitely deserves it.
Funny books with some similar themes to The Romantic Tragedies of a Drama King:
The Gifted, the Talented and Me by William Sutcliffe
The Private Blog of Joe Cowley by Ben Davis
Boys Don’t Knit by T.S. Easton
Socks Are Not Enough by Mark Lowery
The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4 by Sue Townsend
India Smythe Stands Up by Sarah Govett
For slightly older readers:
Noah Can’t Even by Simon James Green
A Totally Awkward Love Story by Tom Ellen and Lucy Iveson