Where you will lose the majority of your British readers is this:
In 2009 a survey of 2,000 British readers concluded that "men are just not that into reading".
I think British readers were not put off by learning something about psychoanalysis.
British readers of the tabloid press now have yet another choice, fresh from American supermarkets.
To a British reader this book is both interesting and disappointing.
He never really hints at who his father was, and to British readers in the late 1920s the thought may have been natural.
Few if any British readers of this book will be surprised by this statement.
British readers were asked to "support Rhodesians in their hour of need."
Because most British readers do not think much of the tabloids' commitment to truth, they often give huge settlements.
Although not viewed as radical by black audiences, it was aimed at white British readers.