After years of owning an English pub, this may have been a terrible idea…
Because I finally wrote it all down.
The floods.
The thefts.
The chefs.
The customers.
The pub dog who thought she was management.
The moments that made me laugh until I cried.
And the moments that made me wonder whether I’d completely lost my mind.
What started as a crazy decision by a Canadian to buy an English pub somehow became 352 pages of stories, recipes, disasters, friendships, and memories.
Today, Lies, Theft and Sh*t on the Ceiling officially launched.
Thank you to everyone who encouraged me to keep writing, shared my stories, bought me a drink, worked beside me, or simply survived the journey with me.
If you’d like to read what really goes on behind the scenes of a village pub, it’s available now:
🇬🇧 UK/EU: amzn.eu/d/09Fe064D
🇨🇦 Canada: a.co/d/02ix35FJ
🇺🇸 USA: a.co/d/0eK4UIpj
And yes… the title is based on a true story (and it’s in the book) #BookLaunch #PubLife #BritishPub #HospitalityLife #AuthorLife
Andrew Squires
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Well…
I actually did it.
Three hundred and fifty two pages.
Years of pub ownership.
Hundreds of stories.
Dozens of recipes.
More chaos than any sensible person should ever experience.
Today, Lies, Theft and Sh*t on the Ceiling officially launches.
It’s the story of what happens when a Canadian decides buying an English pub sounds like a reasonable life choice.
There are floods.
There are thieves.
There are chefs.
There is a sheepdog who thinks she’s management.
And somehow, despite everything, there are moments that remind you why pubs matter.
Available now:
🇬🇧 UK/EU: amzn.eu/d/09Fe064D
🇨🇦 Canada: a.co/d/02ix35FJ
🇺🇸 USA: a.co/d/0eK4UIpj
Thank you to everyone who encouraged me to keep writing.
Now excuse me while I spend the rest of the day pretending I’m not terrified that people can actually read it.
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Well, after years of pub ownership and months of writing, tomorrow’s the day. The book launches. I’m excited. I’m terrified. And I’ve just realised there’s no way to recall 352 pages if I’ve accidentally confessed to something.
#BookLaunch
#NewBook
#PubLife
#BritishPub
#Memoir
#LiesTheftAndShitOnTheCeiling
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ROAST AND GLORY: A CANADIAN’S GUIDE TO THE BRITISH SUNDAY ROAST
The first thing you need to understand about the British Sunday roast is that it is not lunch.
Calling it lunch would be like calling the Vatican a nice building.
A Sunday roast is an institution. A ritual. A weekly act of national worship involving meat, potatoes, gravy, and enough calories to sustain a small fishing village through a harsh winter.
As a Canadian arriving in Britain, I was unprepared for the scale of it all.
In Canada, Sunday lunch might mean a sandwich. Maybe leftover pizza if you’ve had a particularly ambitious Saturday night.
In Britain, Sunday lunch requires planning.
Families discuss it days in advance.
Tables are booked weeks ahead.
Grandparents arrive early to secure strategic seating positions.
Children are scrubbed and presented to society.
Entire villages migrate towards pubs as though responding to some ancient ancestral signal encoded deep within their DNA.
Nobody says it out loud.
But everybody knows where they’re going.
They’re going for a roast.
The first sign that this is not a normal meal comes when you see the plate.
Calling it a plate is generous.
It’s more of a serving platter with ambitions.
A mountain of beef, lamb, pork or chicken sits proudly in the centre, surrounded by roast potatoes, Yorkshire puddings, vegetables, stuffing, cauliflower cheese, pigs in blankets if you’re lucky, and enough gravy to qualify as a navigable waterway.
If you’ve never experienced a Yorkshire pudding before, let me explain.
Imagine somebody looked at pancake batter and thought:
“What if we put this in the oven and created a delicious edible bucket specifically designed to transport gravy into our mouths?”
That person was a genius.
The Yorkshire pudding is not a side dish.
It is an engineering solution.
Then there are the roast potatoes.
God help you if you underestimate the importance of roast potatoes.
A British person can tolerate political disagreement.
They can survive economic uncertainty.
They can even sit through an England penalty shootout.
But serve a mediocre roast potato and suddenly you’re dealing with a level of disappointment normally reserved for national tragedies.
Every British family secretly believes they make the best roast potatoes in the country.
Every pub claims theirs are legendary.
Every grandmother has a method.
Every grandfather has an opinion.
And every one of them is prepared to defend those opinions to the death.
I’ve witnessed arguments over roast potatoes that were longer and more passionate than discussions about Brexit.
Then comes the gravy.
Oh, the gravy.
The British relationship with gravy is difficult for outsiders to fully appreciate.
Gravy is not a condiment.
It is not an optional extra.
It is not something politely drizzled over food.
Gravy is deployed.
Applied with enthusiasm.
Introduced in quantities that would concern civil engineers.
The objective is not simply to enhance the meal.
The objective is to ensure that every item on the plate is operating under maritime conditions.
Somewhere during all this, somebody inevitably mentions being full.
This statement is completely meaningless.
The words “I’m stuffed” are merely part of the ceremony.
A mandatory phrase recited moments before ordering sticky toffee pudding.
Because no matter how much roast beef, gravy and potatoes a person has consumed, there is always room for sticky toffee pudding.
Scientists should study this phenomenon.
Entire laws of physics appear to collapse around it.
I’ve watched people finish enough food to stun a horse and then confidently announce:
“I’ll just have something light.”
The next thing you know they’re eating a dessert the size of a paving slab covered in custard.
But here’s the thing.
The Sunday roast isn’t really about the food.
The food is just the excuse.
It’s about families gathering around a table. It’s about old friends meeting in the pub. It’s about grandparents spoiling grandchildren, football arguments, terrible jokes, and stealing Yorkshire puddings from someone else’s plate when they’re not looking.
It’s about sitting together for a couple of hours without rushing off somewhere else.
In a world where everybody seems permanently distracted, permanently busy and permanently staring at a screen, there is something reassuringly stubborn about a tradition that says:
“No. Sit down. Eat this ridiculous amount of food. Talk to each other.”
As a Canadian, there are many British traditions I still don’t fully understand.
Morris dancing.
Warm beer.
The national obsession with discussing the weather.
But the Sunday roast?
That one I understand perfectly.
Because any tradition built around family, friendship, gravy and roast potatoes is a tradition worth protecting.
Even if I still need a nap afterwards.
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