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From Friendship to Love II is what it says on the tin or the label
is the next chapter of a study of two people falling in love told
throughout a series of short poems. From Friendship to Love II is a
study of what happens next when two people who were very very close
friends take the chance and see what happens next if they try being
a couple instead of just been best friends and enter their second
year together as a couple From Friendship to Love II is a honest
and emotional study looking at things as a series of adventures
with a tenderness and a sense of touch of humour rarely seen in
poetry talking about how everything changed as two people simply
tried to find happiness with each other and what happens next as
they enter their second year together as a couple.
Following from the harsh reality of Europa II The true cost of war
, Europa III Peace Sells looks at war again with an art-brush as
much as a poem blowing up like a shattered bomb as much as a
patchwork of stories where there is no winners, no losers, only
people simply trying to surivie. Their poems mix tenderness and
sadness with the sudden-ness and passing off life where you may
step off a beach with some of the best friends you have ever met
only to have them stripped away at any given moment.
Stepping over the gate into pastures afresh, The Birth of Autumn,
the third full-length poetry book by Andy N, author of both 'Return
to Kemptown' and 'The End of Summer' is a collection of poetry
rooted in the exhilaration and the melancholy in the change of
season that follows Summer. Told in sparse, tender brush-strokes,
the book is as much a sequel to his previous book The End of Summer
as a further exploration of life as well as the change of rural and
agricultural rhythms of Autumn all wrapped in a whirl of emotions
that follows at the end of one season that follows into the next.
The Birth of Autumn is a book lost in shadows as the skies begin to
darken slowly but also brings back beauty into your emotions,
adventures into feelings and the leaves on the floor into a
miraculously vibrant colour.
A mysteries world A decaying empire within a wall that has existed
for thousands of years. A building war A hidden nightmare tucked
away for thousands of years. It all waits to be discovered in Enemy
of the Wall, the first in a thrilling new series 'Barbarians of the
Wall' that mixes fantasy and poetry in a thrilling reading
experience by the author of the 'Role Reversal' series Andy N. Told
from a variety of points of view, Enemy of the Wall takes the
reader into a mysteries new world covered in a huge, epic wall
where for thousands of years all inside the wall are citizens and
all of those outside are not and a hidden menace that threatens
everybody. Told in epic, long form fantasy poems, Enemy of the Wall
will delight adults, teens and anyone who relishes an adventure
tucked away in mystery and the shadows.
Following on from his debut collection 'Return to Kemptown', 'The
End of Summer' is a poetry collection capturing both the
every-moment of perpetual seasons as well as the vital minutiae of
daily life, all wrapped up a whirl of words like autumn leaves
kicked up by the last of summer's winds taking nature's
contradictions and her false promises and casts them over our human
condition, as hopeful and nostalgic disciples of the glorious sun
and the beautiful snow. Told often in taut, short little pieces,
the book invites comparisons with the poet Hugo Williams but also
shows a love of music through two of the author's own favourite
music groups with July Skies and Epic 45, which explores the
Englishness of the countryside in sparse, echoing brush-stroke, s
which often need more than one read to breathe the images he
portraits. With an introduction by noted American writer, Amanda
Silbernagel. 'The End of Summer' is a book that tunnels into
memories, creating new emotions at the end of it.
Stepping away into the shadows, The Streets were all we could see
is the fourth full-length poetry collection by Andy N, author of
most recently 'The End of Summer' and 'The Birth of Autumn' walking
away at least temporarily from seasonal mysteries into tiny almost
flash fiction pieces masked as poems. Told almost as tiny murmurs,
each of the poems contained within this book are told not as a
sequel to either of his seasonal books but a grasping of emotions
in the most tiny fragments of life from chasing goodbyes on front
doorsteps to abandoned bicycles outside shopfront windows and cars
dying when you least expect. The streets were all could see
explores life through a different lens like a picture catching a
memory before memory distorts it taking you a transformative
journey from the good and the bad moments and everything that flows
in-between it
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The Party
Elizabeth Day
Paperback
(1)
R323
R215
Discovery Miles 2 150
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