Sunday, October 5, 2014

OXFORD REJECTS

Well, after much redrafts, editing and getting the final draft back from the proofreaders......My first novel, Oxford Rejects

A homage to Talented Mr Ripley, Brideshead and The Secret History, I hope readers enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it!

Hopefully it will find a home soon....









LEE CHILD

Murakami's assertion in a recent Guardian interview that he likes Lee Child and given Lee Child dominates my only published work stable in the Kindle Singles, I decided to give Lee Child a try.

I downloaded 'This is not a drill', current Kindle Single number one.

I admit I liked the style and certainly was charmed by Jack, like millions of others.

I borrowed a tattered copy of 'Worth dying For' and I've just finished it.

To me, Jack is the mythical superhero that all communities yearn for, to deal with the town's bad guys and the jerks. The men who slap their wives and think it's OK, the cops who look the other way, because it's easier.

Jack is the good guy, the one who wont sell you out, and not let you down.

While I'll hardly rush out and read the complete series, I've already gone into a bookshop and got the first in the series, so who knows, I may continue for the next 18 or so books!



Tuesday, August 26, 2014

9 Video's to show Aliens - should they arrive on Earth.



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August Review 2014



Maybe like a few readers, I first got wind of Yates thru the Hollywood film version of Revolutionary Road.

This is the perfect intro to this great writer. His writing is a brutal lens on ordinary Americans - the ordinary becomes extraordinary.

His prose has a quality that cuts through to the heart of the matter and I found the stories had to be read in one sitting. It's a wonder why Yates isn't lauded as an American great, he deserves to be.

Give this book a chance and enter his world where the suffocation of existence has never been so well told..


Franco currently teaches at UCLA, between movies and writing, which demonstrates the versatile nature of this young hollywood property. There's a good novel struggling to get out of this book, maybe Franco is too close to the fire to avoid getting burnt. While there are snatches of good prose in this loosely connected short stories...the overall shape of this book is garbled and at times incoherent.

Worth a read if only to take an insiders view of Hollywood from a young man who certainly has a lot of talent




Siri has surpassed herself with this. It reads like an interesting non fiction, but no, this is a novel. This work is best enjoyed if you let Hustvedt transport you.
This is a novel about masks, levels of perception and there were times when Harriet Burden was as real to me as any dead artist. The writer has pulled off a masterpiece in fiction - in letting the reader be transformed into a willing piece in their universe. The mechanics of the book is an assortment of voices that knew the dead artist - grown up children, friends, critics and lovers and is nothing like I've read recently. Like 'What I loved' a deeply intellectual book that doesn't shut out the very well read. It's a very easy book to read and in a celeb obsessed world of skin deep; important in these times.

I would say this is the most important book I've read in some time as it challenges what we consider a novel, while challenging the ideas of gender in the aloof New York art scene. Like The Flamethrowers, by Kushner, it raises important questions of the female in art - so much the object rather than the artist . It's interesting that Harriet's husband is an art dealer who 'picks her up' - yet whose voice is only found once her husband dies and she is no longer a 20 something woman with striking breasts, but middle aged and invisible.

Genius.

Monday, August 4, 2014

Review page added

I've finally got round to posting a review page, each month I'll add books that I like or really love...


Let's start with a recent buy....

 

C J Anderson's Enter Ruinland grabbed me for the cover, which just shows a good cover can grab even an old cynic like me! It tells the story of a neurotic AI and a group of survivors at a military underground shelter, after a devastating nuclear war has ravaged the outside world. Anderson according to his bio, is a born again Atheist and it shows deeply in his/her writing. 

The writing burns with emotion, set against a solid good sci fi yarn, rather like Atwood this is literary sci fi from a self published writer who, if they stick at it, have a promising future career ahead. It's as much as a theological discussion on what is good or bad, whether we are ever born good or bad and big questions in a post nuclear world.

The super intelligence that runs the facility, an AI named Sophie, computes that the survivors who demonstrate gene deficiency for psychotic behaviour should be eliminated. It finds ten of the group of seventy as incapable of full human emotions...do the others not selected stand back and allow the others to die? Or does the greater good logic make sense to them. 

One of those selected for termination is a soldier who the AI test positive for having psychotic tendencies, who decided he aint going quietly.....

A welcome addition to the growing literature that blurs literary fiction with sci fi and so leaves that genre a richer place....

The writer is currently giving away the novel free HERE

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Frank

I have vague memories of Frank Sidebottom. It (He) was part of my alternative youth and I warmed to the whole concept of a man( a mad man) behind a big friendly mask.

The film is very very loosely connected to the great man, but worth a watch.


Thursday, May 22, 2014

What a cool site

I'm just finishing Rachel's Kushner's second book, 'The Flamethrowers' when I decided to check out her author website and it way cool:  http://rachelkushner.com/books.html


I checked out who built her site which led me to the creators other work

http://dinakelberman.com/

Cool motherfuckers at : Dinakelbermanwebdesign (DLK)


Thursday, April 10, 2014

Yes you can!!


Yes you can !!


Finally my short story is up on Kindle Singles!


Sunday, April 6, 2014

April 2014

JOAN CORNELLĂ€




I suppose race has been a pre-occupation with me most of my life and as the saying goes, 'A chip on my shoulder'. I wont apologise for this.

'The Last Black Man'

The short story of under 6,000 words was written very quickly, read more about my published short story here





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Martin packed up his bags and went to LA to learn to write...Good luck to him...Now he's back in London, wiser, older and lighter...