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BARNABY TAYLOR

  • The Hastings Trilogy (Barnaby Taylor, 2017)

    November 29th, 2017

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    ONE

    Two pints, says Mepham as he walks in the door. Billy is already there. And Stu. Make it three, Mepham says as he spots the boys playing pool. How’s it going, lads, he says as he walks over. Billy is lining up a shot. Red ball, centre pocket, he says though he doesn’t need to. Just hit it, says Stu. And hurry up. Stu is always in a bad mood. It doesn’t matter what you do, he always see the bad in things. Billy isn’t so bad. A couple of pints and he likes a laugh. But Stu can be wearing if you are not careful. Mepham stands next to Billy. He puts the pints on the ledge by the mirror. Mepham goes to light a cigarette when his phone goes. The text message arrived. GOD AIN’T GLAD W’V FOES OF D FAITH N D KINGDOM. Mepham looked up from his phone. Stop playing, lads, he says. You both need to choose, he said. What you gonna be? Alguacil? Alcaide? Billy looked up. What about you, he said. You need to choose as well. I already have, said Mepham. Malleus Haereticorum, that’s me. Typical, said Billy. You would be, wouldn’t you. I suppose you need me to choose as well, says Stu. You know you do, replies Mepham. You know you do. We have been through this a thousand times. We knew this was coming, didn’t we. The phone went again. GOD NOS WHO’S RONG N HS SINNED. SN A CALAMITY WL OCCUR 2 DOZE HU AV CONDEMD US 2 DETH. Here we are, says Mepham. It’s kicking off nicely.

    ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊

    This town is one of those places. Hate hangs heavy here. Sighs, cries and farts smear the air. Bad dreams at night. The castle on a hill. Piss-stained and decrepit. A hunched dark gargoyle. Bent with a spastic twist. The bastard gaze of the vomit-eyed moon. Dripping down like the sour splash of ruined milk. Shit stains the footpaths here and is stepped into every carpet. This town is one of those places. Blighted like a poisoned tree.

    Stretch and Steve didn’t look so good in the papers, we figured. So we became Tubby and Stretch for the 1962 ‘Hastings Got Happy?’ contest. It was a talent show so the question mark was crucial. For a brief time we were big in a local way. ‘Two boys who might go far’, said the Hastings Observer on July 12th 1962. ‘A pair like you have never seen’, cried the Eastbourne Herald on the same day. ‘You’re onto something’, people told us. ‘A stage or a trail?’, we would reply. ‘You boys’, they’d say. ‘You boys’. Who else was on the stage that night? Thompson the Wonder Dog. Petal Perkins – ‘the Prettiest Flower in All the World’. Or ‘Wolrd’ as the posters all said. Brother Simon and the Temple Five. That was then.

    I would that it were, Sir. I would that it were. He puts down his glass. Foolish single hairs tight across his silly skull. Our pair in the Snug of the Empty Nest. The one that sits at the top of the hill. Down to the reservoir. People have been beaten as they walk this way home. Monday night and the Pool team have lost. The video jukebox is silent again. Do you want one more? I think that I might, Sir. I think that I might. He’ll ring the bell in a mo. One more? I think that I might. Well, do you? I think that I might. And a pack of those cheesy crunchy things. That’s one more, then? Back from the bar with two pints. Sandwiches left on a plate. The visiting team didn’t finish theirs. Did you want a sandwich? Not for me, please? Not for me. Now what was we saying? Remember when things were different? Round here, you mean? When things were the same? As they always were? Exactly. What I would give for them to be back as before. I would that they were, Sir. I would that they were. But listen to us. He lights that pipe again. Not that pipe, please. Small comforts, Sir. Small comforts. The Snug is empty now. Just the two of them. Do we only moan? I’m not moaning. Just talking, like. As neighbours will do. Yeah, just like neighbours will do.

    Brother Simon? You remember. Brother Simon and the Temple Five. Glory old gospel stuff. Precious Wings and Holy Limbs. How could I forget, Sir? How could I forget? I remember them well. Lord, Lend Me Love. Brother Simon swooping as the Temple Five fell in behind. One-knee bending. All the moves. We were better than them. Far better. And that bloody alsation! What was he called? Thompson the Wonder Dog, Sir. Thompson the Wonder Dog. Managed by bastard bloody Bumstead. That bastard Bumstead turning the handle. Thompson singing along. Singing he called it. Singing. We were better than them. Far better. But no-one sang with us. No sir. No-one sang with us. Bastard Bumstead smiling as the audience joined in. All of them. But we were funny, Sir. We were funny. You boys, they said. You boys. People were laughing. But laughing’s not singing. People weren’t singing. That bastard shit-licking Bumstead. He laughed as well. Laughed as Thompson won. Dog must be long dead. I would that it were, sir. I would that it were. Must be! Can’t be still living. Couldn’t possibly be.

    Time at the bar, please. Time at the bar.

    Bastard bloody Bumstead. Always the one we hated the most.

    Our two walking home. Past the chicken shop. The promise of a dripping box. Past the all-night garage. Queuing to talk through the tiny hole. Drop your money in the sliding drawer. Scrabbling for your change. No buses now. Stopped running a while ago. Only two an hour anyway. Past the old model shop. With the train in the window. Once round the track for 5p. Tall houses and the church on the right. Uphill path through the arch of the trees. Not a soul. Not a soul.

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  • Cursor (Barnaby Taylor, 2017)

    November 22nd, 2017

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    I am hiding in the eaves of a derelict shed on a long-abandoned farm found on the western edge of Inis Mór, the largest of the Aran Islands.

    Inis Mór is a major tourist destination, with bed and breakfast accommodation scattered across the island. Private minibuses, horse-drawn carriages and bicycles are the main methods of getting about for the numerous tourists who visit the island in the summer months, the majority of which are the Irish themselves but with an extraordinary number of British, French and German holiday-makers.

    There is a small museum illustrating the history of Dún Aonghasa and its possible functions, while The Aran Sweater Market is also a focal point for visitors who can trace the culture and history associated with the Aran sweater through the on-site museum.

    I am posing as someone on a cycling holiday touring the West of Ireland.

    These ceremonies are never elaborate affairs. They do not involve large crowds of people all chanting and wearing hooded robes. There is no sacrifice of any kind, either animal or human. As such, there is very little evidence, if any, that they actually take place. Instead, they are very small, private affairs, with only a couple of people present and no fanfare or ceremony. This makes them impossible to find. Almost.

    It was the digital switch-over of October 2012 that first alerted me to the possibility of witnessing one. Heralded at the time as ‘the dawn of the digital broadcasting era’, the closure of the Irish analogue network freed up space for additional services. In the race to sell digital television packages to the nation, no one stopped to consider what else might be attracted by this newly-freed space.

    I remembered reading about take-up rates for digital packages and this part of Ireland was ranked as the lowest in Europe. Straightaway this caught my eye and further cross-referencing led to me a vox pop conducted by a freelance journalist for Our Home News, a free one-sheet popular with Irish ex-pats living in Mallorca. Commenting on the forthcoming switch-over a certain Mr O’Halloran was quoted as saying that after years of waiting he could now look forward to ‘more light in the night’.

    For the journalist conducting the interviews this sounded like nothing more than one more turn of phrase from a nation famous for its way with words. To my trained ear, however, this was exactly the break I had been looking for.

    I was straight on the next available flight to Galway.

     

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  • Her (Barnaby Taylor, 2017)

    November 15th, 2017

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    I am dead now. I don’t want to be dead. But I am. I didn’t want to die. It wasn’t painful. It wasn’t slow. People didn’t have to sit by my bed for days on end. I died suddenly. Without warning. Just died. Luckily she wasn’t there when it happened. She was at school. Her aunt had to collect her and bring her home. Her mum was with me at the hospital.

    Funerals will be always sad. Even for the dead. I was there. Not there. Obviously. I couldn’t bear to see her cry. Be brave. Grown-up. Pretend. Smile. Cry again. A new dress. Clinging to Mum. My will said no boring songs. I sang along to Alice Clark. No one else knew the words. Never Did I Stop Loving You. Her. Not Alice Clark. But I did love hearing Alice Clark. Death is confusing.

    I watch her filling a jar with glass pebbles. Each night she chooses two to put inside her pillow. Dream stones. Tonight she chooses an extra one. For me. For her. If I could speak now what could I say? I can’t unbreak her broken heart. She has her whole life ahead of her. Her future. I hope for her to be happy again. Maybe not now. But some time. Me. I only have now. Forever.

    Over the weeks I watch how remarkable she is. Now I am dead I can see everything about her more clearly. Her kindness. Compassion. Insight. Strength. Recovery. Hope. Determination. All the things reserved for so-called adults alive and full in her still-young heart. All the things I knew she was always capable of are now beginning to truly flower. I just want her to stop apologising for being sad. It is not her fault I died. Not her.

    I don’t feel the rain anymore. But I do feel the crushing weight of disappointment as the rain puts her school trip in doubt. Trying to be confident as she walks to school in her rain jacket. ‘It’s only a shower,’ she says. ‘That’s what Dad would say.’ But it wasn’t a shower. It rained all day. The trip was postponed. Looking through the window of her classroom I watch her as she nearly smiled. Her eyes don’t join in.

    I never told her when my dad told me that he had cancer. I wanted to but I didn’t want her to worry. She will have plenty of time for that later. Why fill her young head with old people’s worries? I wanted death to be part of the conversation she had as an adult. But I died before my dad and my plan to protect her came to nought. I actually made things worse for her.

    Here comes her birthday. For the first time I’m not there to celebrate with her. People keep telling her that I’ll be there in spirit. That I will be watching. I am and I am but it is no comfort to her. Or me. I’ll be in the kitchen when she comes down on the morning and sees the presents on the table. The cards. Balloons. The birthday hat with the comedy candles. Her eyes.

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  • The Eleventh Film (Barnaby Taylor, 2017)

    November 8th, 2017

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    Hello Everyone

    Here is the first in an occasional flash fiction series.

    The Eleventh Film re-imagines the birth of cinema as something altogether more sinister by offering a Lovecraftian take on the world-changing event that took place in Paris in 1895.

     

    The Eleventh Film

    The first public film screening was organized by Auguste and Louis Lumière and took place on December 28th 1895 at the Salon Indien du Grand Café in Paris.

    Eleven short films were on the bill that night.

    When passed through a projector, the average film was 17 meters long and ran for approximately 50 seconds.

    Only ten films are listed for posterity.

    1. La Sortie de L’Usine Lumière à Lyon (Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory ) (46 seconds)
    2. Le Jardinier (L’Arroseur Arrosé) (The Gardener, or The Sprinkler Sprinkled) (49 seconds)
    3. Le Débarquement du Congrès de Photographie à Lyon (The Disembarkment of the Congress of Photographers in Lyon) (48 seconds)
    4. La Voltige (Horse Trick Riders) (46 seconds)
    5. La Pêche aux poissons rouges (Fishing for Goldfish) (42 seconds)
    6. Les Forgerons (Blacksmiths) (49 seconds)
    7. Repas de bébé (Baby’s Breakfast) (41 seconds)
    8. Le Saut à la couverture (Jumping onto the Blanket) (41 seconds)
    9. La Places des Cordeliers à Lyon (Cordeliers Square in Lyon) (44 seconds)
    10. La Mer (Baignade en mer) (The Sea/Bathing in the Sea) (38 seconds)

    The eleventh film was called The View of Pazuzu returning to the World. This was a simple desert scene, with a half-buried broken statue anointed by a baleful simoon.

    It only ran for one second and was not noticed by most of the audience.

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  • EXCITING NEWS!!!!!! – Sneak Preview – VIROS Book Two – Chapter One

    October 25th, 2017

    VIROS COVER - #1

    Viros Book Two – Chapter One

    The rain fell like tears from all the eyes of all the dead the world now knew. Everyone was soaking wet and freezing cold. The sound of the angry swarm raged beneath us. It filled the air. We were all too frightened to move in case they saw us.

    ‘I doubt that any of them could get up here,’ said Vinnie. ‘I pulled up the ladder so logically we should be safe.’

    But the rules of logic didn’t apply anymore. Dead people coming back to life had rendered these rules redundant in the time it took for someone else to be turned into a viro. In any case, we weren’t so much as safe as actually trapped. The safe part was the simple consequence of being trapped. At least that was how I saw it.

    I surrendered to despair. I retreated into that part of me where I had always felt the safest whenever my difference to most of the rest of the world became too noticeable.

    ‘It’s okay to be quiet, Jake,’ Mum would say. ‘It is also okay to be private but please don’t let the world make you feel that you always have to be like this.’

    She smiled and ruffled my hair. I loved it when she did that.

    ‘It’s also okay to be loud and enjoy life and have lots of friends and play silly games and just be yourself.’

    But she wasn’t here right now and so the self that I felt most like being was the quiet and private and despairing self, not the loud and life-enjoying one.

    Ellis had fallen asleep with her head on my shoulder. Her hair was so close to my face that I could smell it. Even despite all the dirt and danger it smelled amazing. I closed my eyes and inhaled as carefully as I could. I held my breath for as long as possible.

    As I gently exhaled I opened my eyes to find Abe watching me. I think he smiled but I wasn’t sure. He saw what I had done. What must he have thought? I went to speak but Abe didn’t want to. He shook his head and turned away.

    Baxter was huddled at my feet and whimpered softly as he dreamed. His coat was covered in tiny water droplets and in this light he shimmered as he shivered. I felt really mean. Baxter had been trapped when I rescued him but now he was trapped again. A dog like that would have had no trouble surviving on its own but instead, in the short space that we had known each other I had pulled him free from one cage only to trap him in another.

    Baxter whimpered again.

    It wasn’t much of a life for him but this wasn’t much of a life for anyone. Were we better off stranded on this roof with no hope of being rescued? Or would it have been better to be engulfed by the swarm like everyone else? I tried to make the calculations in my mind but I couldn’t be sure.

    I was getting hungry and with no food and no drink it wouldn’t be long before we were all in trouble. Abe had suggested that he crept back downstairs to try and find something to eat.

    ‘I’ll give it a go,’ said Abe. ‘I’m good at sneaking about and staying hidden.’

    But, as Vinnie pointed out, the tower block would be full of viros by now and how would anyone be able to sneak down five sets of stairs, get into the kitchen, find what we needed and then sneak back up five flights of stairs without being noticed.

    ‘You’re a brave kid, Abe,’ said Vinnie, ‘but it would be a suicide mission and in any case, if you didn’t make it back then one of us would probably end up having to come and look for you and then if we didn’t make it back then the next person and the next person.’

    I could see that Abe was disappointed. Amber punched her brother playfully on the arm.

    ‘Vinnie’s right, you know,’ she said kindly. ‘You’re good, Abe, really good, but no one could get down there and back. It wouldn’t matter who you were. There’s far too many of them.’

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  • Fantastic news – PROJECT VIROS – Christmas release is imminent

    October 18th, 2017
    VIROS – SEPTEMBER 2017 TRAILER

    VIROS – SEPTEMBER 2017 TRAILER

    Hi Everyone,

    A lot of people have been asking so here is the latest news about the VIROS series.

    Book One is in the final editing stages and is inching closer to publication. All things being equal we are looking at a launch just in time for Christmas 2017. I am very excited about this and look forward to giving you all a further update once Book One is published.

    Book Two is currently with my wonderful beta readers and is receiving some fantastic feedback. A whole host of new characters appear as Jake, Ellis, Abe, Amber and Vinnie battle their way through a zombie apocalypse.

    Book Three is underway and significant progress is being made.

    The plan is for Book Two to be released in early 2018 and Book Three will follow by the middle of next year.

    I would like to say a great big thank you to everyone who has shown an interest in Project Viros and look forward to sharing more news with you all very soon.

     

     

     

     

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  • For Film and Television: The Entry Word

    September 13th, 2017

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    The Entry Word

    ©Barnaby Taylor 2016

     

    BOOK ONE: ‘MENAGERIUM JODOCUS’

    1. It is the global television coverage of the 2016 Rio Olympics that brings about the end of the world. No virus. Outbreak. Meteor hurtling earthward. Planet warming. Planet cooling. Rising tides. Tidal waves. Instead, viewers around the globe are endlessly encouraged to email and text and tweet and share their views on the Games and the athletes and the achievements and as always happens with the excitement of live television too many people get too much wrong too many times simultaneously and so they mistype and misspell and send messages that don’t arrive and texts that aren’t delivered and tweets that are returned and shares that never are but instead of these messages and texts and tweets and shares just disappearing they all align instead into one single endless string and spell out in their global accident the Entry Word.

    And that is that.

     

    2. ‘We are here,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft. Not tall or small or large. Just him. Her. Both. Neither. All. Bleary-eyed. Centuries-old and the same tired. Crumpled after arriving. Constipated. Wearing a plain linen suit with a sweat ring beneath each arm. Polyester shirt. Slip-on shoes. Migraine.

    ‘I suppose you could call us cosmic spam if you felt so inclined but it matters not a jot. Most things matter the small sameness to us. We are endlessly without endless priorities.’

    Jodocus does the chat-show circuit all at once, simultaneously appearing on every chair and sofa around the world. Beamed live on every screen.

    ‘It was you who spelt the Entry Word so don’t blame us for what happens next. With your too-big fingers and too-hasty thumbs all tapping and typing in terrible error. How could you have ever known?’

    Jodocus has very big hands in proportion to the rest of his body when he lifts a single finger for emphasis.

    ‘History is jumble anyway so what’s more confusion.’

    Jodocus smiles for the cameras.

    ‘Only disorder is truly understood and therefore ever-engendered. None look like you have the capacity for real stillness with your fussing and itching and barking like annoying small dogs all less important than they believe.’

    Jodocus shakes his head.

    ‘No interruptions. None. Simple listening will always suffice.’

    And though the whole world has a hundred thousand million objections all based on size and creed and history and logic and faith and superstition and other such informations none of these hundred thousand million objections actually formulate properly in the presence of someone so far removed from understanding as to render each and every thought and belief and hope held dear now redundant. Replaced. Deep dark dense dangerous delicate. Unfathomable.

    Wonder.

     

    3. Sea levels start to rise. Waves lap. Buildings now bob. Submerged where once they stood tall and proud. Clouds boil black and fearful. Deserts grow tall green grass springing from the dirty sand.

    ‘Simple tricks,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Pointless entertainments designed not to prove worth but to simply demonstrate. D-E-M-O-N-STRATE.’

    Mere feints and darts. Patients are miraculously healed and tumours disappear. But churches collapse. Ocean liners sink without trace. Airplanes vanish. Technologies begin their fail. Countries start to starve.

    ‘This is what I mean by disorder,’ smirks Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘In the time we have already spent together I have brought seventy six species of plants and animals back from extinction whilst also removing 0.000002% of the world’s population.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft looks through the camera into the eyes of the world.

    ‘The question is what next?’

     

    4. ‘I don’t know what I want with you yet,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft to the General Assembly of the United Nations. ‘You brought me here and I haven’t had time to formulate a plan.’

    All languages at once are heard true in his ear. Only the world cannot hear each other.

    ‘You gathered people are right to be afraid because it was a terrible idea to wake me up and get me here from there. A terrible idea.’

    The Assembly have no words.

    ‘I will take petitions like a king from old. You may visit me in my court. I will accept tributes of all and every kind. I will read four letters a day but only if they are handwritten. Be there in person and be prepared to wait for a long time.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft turns to leave.

    ‘I warn you though,’ he says over his shoulder. ‘I cannot ever be fair.’

     

    5. ‘I bet you don’t even know what I am?’ Jodocus Meaddowcraft continues. ‘Saint? Resurrect? Alien? Visitor? Deity? Destroyer? Saviour? Traveller?’

    No one knows what to say to Jodocus Meaddowcraft. Advice is sought but not provided.

    ‘No whispering,’ whispers Jodocus Meaddowcraft loudly as delegates confer. ‘Do not talk amongst yourselves any longer. Only to me with the conditions I have outlined.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft looks around.

    ‘This building is about to be off-limits to you all so please get ready to leave straightaway.’

     

    6. There is a multitude of us,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘One after the other and then the next again forever now. More than you can count.’

    ‘Behold the Unslept’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft, pointing at the screen.

    ‘See how they play.’ Jodocus laughs. ‘Each one summoned by a mistyped search.’

    The Assembly looks and what it sees chilled to the bone. A hundred thousand million figures in perpetual tortured motion; fighting and climbing and dancing and jumping, in gangs and alone, all moving forever. The image is grainy but there was no doubt as to what the world is seeing, the end of itself. They begin materializing. All the shapes and sizes you can imagine. Many you cannot hope to.

     

    7. The next morning. ‘I am obtuse from now forever,’ declares Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘We have seen enough of your foolish world to be anything other than annoyed for having been summoned through your stupidity.’

    Jodocus smiles.

    ‘Furthermore, you will now find it hard to understand me when I speak.’

    Another smile.

    ‘But just before that happens just always know that I only have your worst interests at heart. There can never be doubt with this.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft clicks his fingers.

    ‘Sense now over gone forever hard speaking me confusion reigns misunderstanding.’

     

    8. ‘Here Bartholomaus Hamson introducing,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Lieutenant. Sidekick. Limb.’

    Bartholomaus Hamson is an ugly brute of a man-monstrosity.

    ‘Herds Bartholomaus Hamson the Unslept,’ continues Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Guidance divining crowd control.’

    Bartholomaus Hamson offers his sleaziest of smiles.

    ‘Grin on, fine friend,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Planet now feeling fear and not happiness.’

    Bartholomaus Hamson begins to shuffle inconveniently and though the world could never know this is Bartholomaus Hamson expressing his joy at arriving through spontaneous dance. His dermatitis skin forms new flabs and folds and flakes as Bartholomaus gathers an unseemly pace.

     

    9. Another monster appears. Bulbous. Slime-lined. Mollusc.

    ‘Einav Dionisii,’ waves Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Wrong all do. Evil only evil only ever.’

    Einav clears his throat and begins to speak like the discord of a rusty orchestra.

    ‘More more agathokakological, gathered ones. A-G-A-T-H-O-K-A-K-O-L-O-G-I-C-A-L. Mainly leaning one way and then other but balanced overall.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft begs to differ. ‘Balance not. Balance not.’

    When Einav Dionisii smiles the world feels a bit more glum.

    ‘Disagreatum est, felice! Disagreatum.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft doesn’t approve of disagreement and demonstrates his disapproval by deigning to smile.

    ‘Not cross me, Bulbo! Not no never now!’

     

    10. With a stench from beyond space and time Mally Jaqueminet appears. She is wreathed in rotting weeds.

    ‘Nihil her thing best,’ says Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘See shining eye danger her facing you. Malingering. Moody. Malevolent. Malicious. Magnificent. Murderous. Mean. Malodorous.’

    Mally bows lows to the watching world. Jodocus Meaddowcraft continues.

    ‘Calamitous. Deadly. Dire. Noxious. Pernicious. Ruinous. Sinister. Threatening. Venomous. Vindictive. Woeful.’

    Thesauritical in his approach, Jodocus Meaddowcraft delights in introducing the world to his world.

     

    11. Agatho Wagner is a proud-strutting myriapod full of mathematical magnificence expressed physically as troubling angles and lines. Resplendent. Repugnatorial. Agatho takes the utmost pleasure in obnoxion and fully appreciates the disgust by which he is defined across the planes. Agatho does not ever speak but writes instead long missives in a tiny hand with a fine-feathered quill and leaves them on the floor for you to try and avoid reading. Don’t ever read them on pain of death.

     

    12. Husniya Hindge is twin and has an arm as long as a leg and a leg as long as an arm and no-one can be truly sure of her outlines as Husniya Hindge shimmers psychosuggestively to cause a distinct mental uncertainty among all of those unlucky enough to meet her. Imagine being defined by a vagueness. Then imagine that vagueness being further defined by yet more vagary and bewilderness. Husniya Hindge is also exceedingly open-minded and this only adds to the difficulties she presents to any dimension upon which she materializes.

     

    13. ‘Backwards,’ declares Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Backwards now world-spinning. All progress halt. New histories writing.’

    His voice is a terrible one, all wrath and gritty.

    ‘Not resting us ‘til world back beginning spin at start once more.’

    Bartholomaus Hamson, Einav Dionisii, Mally Jaqueminet, Agatho Wagner, and Husniya Hindge agree.

    ‘My plan,’ crows Jodocus Meaddowcraft to the weary Assembly. ‘My heart-hope all ambition decided.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft raises himself to a height hitherto not imagined and looms large across the floor of the UN Building.

    ‘My palace now begone foul fellows flee!!!!’

    The delegates scattered with a mixture of fear for the future and relief from the experience.

    END OF BOOK ONE

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  • VIROS – Coming Soon

    September 6th, 2017
    VIROS – SEPTEMBER 2017 TRAILER

    VIROS – SEPTEMBER 2017 TRAILER

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  • ‘How clever is this! This author speaks my language.’

    August 30th, 2017

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    Hello Everyone

    It is comforting to know that there is still a minuscule sliver of the world that keeps turning kindly and so even when you are working on a brand-new project another project that you have recently been working on is still gently simmering away like a favourite stew on your favourite stove.

    Falcon Boy and Bewilder Bird versus Dr Don’t Know in a Battle for all the Life of all the Planets, the first in the Falcon Boy: A Fairly Hopeless Hero trilogy has recently received another five star review.

    In case you didn’t know, Falcon Boy and Bewilder Bird are the world’s worst superheroes and have been kidnapped by the world’s most feared super-villain, Dr. Don’t Know.

    Dr. Don’t Know is planning to steal the answer to every question known to the world and replace them with a simple ‘DON’T KNOW.’

    With Falcon Boy and Bewilder Bird out of the way, Dr. Don’t Know’s evil plan is likely to succeed unless Ellis, an ordinary girl with extraordinary poise and grace (modelled on someone very close to my heart) can prevent him.

    If action, adventure, danger, mystery, superheroes, detectives, robots, music, comedy, thrills, laughter, computers, tears, pop stars, apocalypse, riddles, songs, dancing, unicorns, disguises, bravery and great long lists are your things then this book simply has to be for you.

    If none of these things are for you then you should simply read Falcon Boy and Bewilder Bird versus Dr Don’t Know in a Battle for all the Life of all the Planets for the simple opportunity to find unexpected pleasure in something you expect to be unpleasurable.

    Either way, here’s the latest FIVE STAR review from another satisfied reader:

    “Have you ever wondered what to call a gang of toughs? A pack? A group? A gaggle? A fist? What about a trouble of toughs?”

    How clever is this! This author speaks my language. His word-play develops each scenario and his characters are afforded magnificent rhetorical excursions, obscure words and phonic mix-ups. It’s a great read with lots of pace. Older children will be thrilled with ‘Falcon Boy’ but I will recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a trip away from the banality of life, no matter what age.

    Tempted? Repulsed? Mildly annoyed? Or simply feeling incredibly benevolent?

    However you feel you can try Falcon Boy and Bewilder Bird versus Dr Don’t Know in a Battle for all the Life of all the Planets for yourself in either paperback or electronic form by shopping at your favourite online emporium.

    Take care.

     

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  • VIROS – Do YOU Want to get INVOLVED?

    August 23rd, 2017

    VIROS COVER - #1

    Calling all readers, writers, editors, agents, authors, publishers, producers, directors, creatives, and absolutely everyone else.

    Want to get involved in an exciting new project?

    TITLE: VIROS

    TAGLINE: Four Kids, One Apocalypse

    LOGLINE: In a virus-ravaged world a twelve year-old with special needs must contend with the collapse of civilisation as he looks for his missing mother.

    AGE RANGE: 11+

    KEY WORDS: Virus; Apocalypse; Zombies: Adventure; Horror; Dystopia; Friendship; Puberty

    OVERVIEW: Described as ‘a cross between The Famous Five and The Walking Dead’ VIROS is a post-apocalyptic adventure series that tells the story of Jake, a twelve year old Down’s Boy who wakes one morning to find that not only has three quarters of the world’s population been turned into bloodthirsty ‘viros’ by an unidentified airborne plague but that his mother is missing.

    Jake sets off to find her and along the way meets a wonderfully wide range of characters including Ellis, a girl hiding on a roof, and mysterious identical twins, Abe and Amber. Joining forces, the four children make their way across a danger-filled, virus-ravaged landscape.

    PROPOSAL: VIROS is currently planned as a series of novels. However, the project is also suitable for development in other forms, including a live-action or film, television or Web series. VIROS is also suitable for converting into a series of graphic novels.

    CURRENT STATUS: Book One is currently 40,000 words and has received excellent feedback from a wide range of beta readers. Book Two is 50% complete.

    ACTIONS: Book One will be published independently in both paperback and electronic form in Autumn 2017. Book Two will follow in January 2018.

    INTERESTED IN GETTING INVOLVED?

    CONTACT ME USING THE FORM BELOW.

    ← Back

    Thank you for your response. ✨

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