Blogs

The quest for moral compass; coming of age in the 70's

We were searchers. I grew from primary playground certainties and the landmarks of World Cup victory, Buzz Aldrin first man on the moon and Sandie Shaw winning for England with Puppet on a String. Then followed the paralysis of adolescent social withdrawal. At 15 I only felt human and accepted in my Saturday job at Clark's bakery, away from pressures of home and school. Then what? Looking back the era seems rougher, more violent than today. At...

Real Madrid 4—Atletico Madrid 1 (after extra time).

The Champions League final is always a disappointment and this was no exception. Much was made of Atletico Madrid losing the final to Bayern Munich, after a reply, forty years ago. Little was said about how they cynically hacked and butchered Celtic’s Quality Street Kids and took turns booting Jimmy Johnstone up in the air at Celtic Park to help qualify for that final. Watch it on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDElMvVdOK4 . That’s...

Quiet Government Men synopsis

The Quiet Government Men. Chris Cauwood 98,000 words 300pp Taylor, member of a failed disaster team, flees the rising sea flooding a panic stricken England. Hurricanes, a super storm christened Noah, cause huge disruption and destruction. He is rescued and recruited by a mysterious organisation, ESO, the so-called Earth Survival Organisation. ESO is prepared, has been preparing for years, and moves in to oversee the rescue and recovery. Taylor...

Microfiction and Discovering Literature with the BL

This week I thought I’d share an addictive little competition being hosted by The César Egido Serrano Foundation. The Spanish Museum of Words is offering 20,000$ to the best 100 word story on any subject. The best part is there’s no fee to enter – so if you took a cue from last week and have been practicing writing cell phone novels, this should be no problem. Have a look and give it a shot! I also stumbled upon the British Library’s new online...

Phil Klay (2014) Redeployment

For me the gold standard of war novels remains All Quiet on the Western Front . We are the first generation not to be involved in a World War (if you exclude global warming, a war we’ve already lost). Klay reminds us the job of soldiers, in Iraq and Afghanistan, is to kill people. He gets inside the character’s heads. That everything in Iraq is fucked up is given. That the infantrymen (and is largely working-class men) doing the fucking up are...

Recent books I've not finished.

Books I’ve been unable or unwilling to finish recently. This is a big step for me. I used to think I owed the book, the author and the universe the obligation of finishing a book when I started it. Rather like hatching a chick, when the eggs broke you’ve got to watch it grow, even if it’s brain-muddled with only one eye. So here goes, a list of books that are unputdownable, only I did. Tom Rob Smith (2009) Child 44 . I got to page 13 on this one...

Beowulf, translated by Seamus Heaney

Blood, revenge, slaughter. Hack their heads off with swords, display their severed limbs as trophies. Men feasting together in the meadhall, men fighting the enemy that springs at their back when they sleep. Bards,ballads, monsters, heroes. Women, proud tribal queens who worship the courage of their men. These are no pagan barbarians, they are Christians, God is in their hearts and fights beside them as they spit the enemy on swords so much a...

Believe or die! Follow or die! Islam?

I have been on our planet for over 3 decades now and I have heard of “jihad”, I have read of women being put to death, I have also studied a course with an Islamist woman who even in her tone was always forceful and pushy and made my anger levels rise with her unwavering voice of ‘or else’. I have never read a positive story about Islamists. I have not read of them starting orphanages or putting value on human life. I have not read of them...

And another bit from my blog

So now we have Mustaffa Brother and his brother! Derek at the top of his game when he worked in menswear!

Cell Phone Novels, the Biology Behind ‘The Tortured Genius’ and How Yawning Can Up Your Creativity

I came across a few interesting things in my reading this week – not least of which was an article in the Huffington post this week exploring a new reading phenomenon in Japan – Cell Phone Novels . Sound weird? They certainly are – they sit somewhere between the poetic concision of a haiku and the manic social gracelessness of a tweet – but that said the most popular text novel, It's Your Fault ( Kimi no Sei ) by Sakura Imo, has been read 17...

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