At least until the incoming President of the Rotary Club leads a charge for ‘the new’. He and his acolytes are desperate to attract younger members to move the club forward, whilst the traditionalists are equally desperate to cling to the old idiosyncratic ways. Let the battle commence.
Aside from Rotary, George is the chairman of the trustees of a small local charity of little relevance in the modern world. He becomes embroiled in a bizarre and hilarious escapade dealing with a tricky problem that attracts the attention of a national newspaper, to the embarrassment of the trustees, who move against him, and his Rotary club.
Other misfortunes and dark dealings come to a head when the Club suspends George’s erstwhile friend, turned nemesis, Alec Barton. Barton goes on a drunken rampage with a shotgun and comes after George, with disastrous results. The club is now at a low ebb and faces dissolution. But is there a way back?
After a long career in the public sector, James Barrett retired to Suffolk. He has been a Rotarian for many years, presently at the Diss & District Club, and before that at the Framlingham and High Suffolk clubs. He has served as President and also Secretary.