This is a heartbreaking and uplifting book about John Wrathall’s double life, the one that ended, in July 2013, when he suffered a left-brain stroke and the one he lives now with great courage and humour in its aftermath. Some things crossed over from one to the other – his fierce intelligence and wit, his love of film and of his three young sons, also the characteristic elegance of his writing. But other parts of the former life were irretrievably lost, a successful career as a screenwriter (Good, The Liability), for instance. In Lobster, he writes about the sense of loss with poignancy and optimism, saying he can barely remember “what [life] was like before the stroke. So this is the new normal. The strange thing is that I’m happier now than I was pre-stroke. Why that is, I don’t really know. But I think it’s to do with living each day just for the day.” In fact, Wrathall is a genius at remembering and early sections of this book capture his almost Wordsworthian joy (and Joy Division) at being young in the dawn of the 1980s. From post-punk to post-stroke, In Those Days I Could Still Eat Lobster is a wonderful book that is almost Zen-like in its self-acceptance.