Archive for December, 2013

Endless Joke by David Antrobus

December 22, 2013

Endless Joke by David Antrobus

A review by R J Dent

 

ej by da

 

 

 

David Antrobus is an author waiting to be discovered. Dissolute Kinship, his 9/11 travelogue-journal, is moving and profound; Endless Joke, his writer’s manual, is useful, informative, entertaining and sometimes irritating.

 

As David Antrobus says: ‘Endless Joke is twenty nine chapters; it’s a paean to and a diatribe against the current book-industry climate… a handbook on how to be writers, but also on how to be publishers, editors, designers, typesetters, formatters, advertisers and publicists. It’s a hybrid of writer’s manual and (pop) cultural commentary… informative, sweet and gleaming with a lifetime’s love of the language.’

 

David Antrobus’ facility with language is superb. His style is literary but also conversational, which sounds like a contradiction, but isn’t. He also has the ability to find humour in subjects not necessarily considered funny.

 

Although Endless Joke is, on the surface, aimed at readers who are (or are aspiring to be) writers, authors, or editors, much of this book would be of interest to those who are interested in the life of a writer, or those fascinated in the minutiae of the publishing world and how it is changing, or even those who are generally interested in literature and language.

 

Endless Joke is a series of stand-alone essays on writing, some originally written for Indies Unlimited, some for The Migrant Type, which is David Antrobus’ blog, and many others specifically written for this book. It is reminiscent of Hunter S. Thompson’s The Great Shark Hunt, a great collection of essays by Thompson, many of them about the process of journalistic writing as well as the subject they claim to be about. David Antrobus has achieved something similar to Thompson in Endless Joke; he has managed to write an illuminating writer’s guide, a critique of the writing business, and a hymn of praise to the writing process.

 

Endless Joke is a very well put-together collection of articles/essays that have been edited and organized into an incredibly useful reference format which will, most likely appeal to the aspiring writer and the experienced author. Endless Joke (the title) is a reference that David Antrobus explains in the introduction to the book. The essays cover a wide range of subjects, yet seem to make a coherent whole.

 

Endless Joke is a very enjoyable, thoughtful, well-written and entertaining read. It is also great value in terms of insights and tips for writers. I enjoyed reading Endless Joke very much and recommend it unreservedly to anyone interested in writing and writers.

David Antrobus

David Antrobus’ work can be found here:

 

https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/DavidAntrobus

 

here:

 

http://www.the-migrant-type.com/

 

here:

 

https://www.facebook.com/david.antrobus

 

here:

 

https://twitter.com/DavidAntrobus

 

and here:

 

http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidantrobus1

 

 

R J Dent is a poet, novelist, translator, essayist, short story writer, researcher, blogger and creative writing tutor. Details of his books can be found at: www.rjdent.com

 

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Ghosts Who Google by Stephen Atkinson

December 8, 2013

9781906451813

 

Ghosts Who Google by Stephen Atkinson

A review by R J Dent

As a fan of scary stories, I eagerly read Stephen Atkinson’s debut short story collection, Ghosts Who Google. These stories are not really traditional ghost stories; instead they offer the reader something new. They are also beautifully written, for Stephen Atkinson has a clear, strong story-teller’s voice which is conveyed in delightfully uncluttered prose. George Orwell would have been proud.

With regards to the content of Ghosts Who Google, if Roald Dahl, James Herbert and Clive Barker had collaborated on a collection of creepy tales, the result would have been the kind of stories to be found in Stephen Atkinson’s Ghosts Who Google. The stories in this collection compare favourably to the best of Roald Dahl’s Tales of the Unexpected and to many of the creepy stories to be found in Clive Barker’s The Books of Blood.

These stories are really for those who love good (by which I mean well-told) ghost stories. They are modern and they undermine the conventions of the traditional ghost story. Some of these twenty-two short stories are humorous; others deadly serious. Some are downright scary and will have readers looking nervously over their shoulders. All of these stories have a twist in the tail.

 

Here’s Stephen Atkinson talking about Ghosts Who Google:

 

Ghosts Who Google is published by Circaidy Gregory Press and is available in paperback and e-book formats.

http://www.circaidygregory.co.uk/Ghosts_who_Google.htm

or

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Ghosts-Who-Google-Stephen-Atkinson/dp/1906451818/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1386537332&sr=1-1&keywords=ghosts+who+google

Paperback: 160 pages

Publisher: Circaidy Gregory Press

ISBN-10: 1906451818

ISBN-13: 978-1906451813

Product Dimensions: 21 x 14.8 x 1.6 cm

Ghosts Who Google by Stephen Atkinson

A Review by R J Dent

(c) R J Dent (2013)

www.rjdent.com