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  • Published: 2 January 2015
  • ISBN: 9780099584193
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 384
  • RRP: $32.00

We Used to Be Kings




A devastating examination of insanity, set against a backdrop of Sputnik spaceships and Russian spies.

Six years ago Tom’s brother died. The next day he came back.

It’s Tom and Jack’s 18th birthday, but it isn’t a cause for celebration. For the past three years they’ve been in a home for troubled children, where Dr Smith tries to silence the voice of Jack in Tom’s head.

But Tom's already lost his brother once, he’s not going to lose him again.

And so they will have to pretend Jack has gone. Because one way or another they’ve got to get out of this place. Because Tom and Jack need to find out what happened that summer six years ago that changed everything...


We Used To Be Kings is the story of a young boy’s descent into madness following the loss of everything he knows. Set in the 1970s, it is reminiscent of unusually hot summers, pictures of Russians in space and war on our doorstep. It’s an audacious, at times hilarious story that is ultimately heartbreaking and unforgettable.

  • Published: 2 January 2015
  • ISBN: 9780099584193
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 384
  • RRP: $32.00

Praise for We Used to Be Kings

We Used to Be Kings is a very powerful book, written with a poignant intensity that often burns. It is one of the most touching books about madness I have ever read, and deserves a wide readership. Stewart Foster has created something very special.

Matt Haig

Fresh and original, a spare and moving tale that’s never showy but often dazzling.

Tim Lewis, Observer

There’s a youthful intensity about this coming of age story.

Theresa Munoz, Herald

Foster's descriptive narrative keeps you gripped and desperate to find out more. A really well-written and engaging first novel, We Used To Be Kings is an absolute must-read.

UK Press Syndication

Stewart Foster’s elegant debut novel is a heartbreaking tale of a boy’s struggle with mental illness, set against the backdrop of the Space Race, 1970s summers and his family’s refusal to face the truth.

Mail on Sunday

There's so much to love in this book, he's such a beautiful, crisp writer. For a first book it's really amazing.

Mark Ravenhill, Review Show (BBC Four)

An extraordinary debut. The author trusts the reader to suss out the plot.

Sue Leonard, Irish Examiner

Stewart Foster’s debut is a spectacular feat of ingenuity and courage that redefines the art of storytelling

Jade Craddock, Nudge

A highly original and hugely moving story of deep psychosis. Stewart Foster challenges us to live in his character's chaotic world, where the dead whisper in our ear, but throughout it all his compassion never falters.

Ciarán Collins, author of The Gamal