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The countryside – what is it for? A paradise on earth where you
can relax and get creative? Or an outdoor wool factory where every
other house is an Airbnb and there are fewer trees than Camden. In
his new collection of short stories David Gaffney explores the
theme of town versus country through a number of different lenses,
including his own experience of being brought up in west Cumbria
then moving to Manchester. A creative residency on the coast of
Scotland becomes weirder and weirder in “The Retreat”;
‘I’ve always had the feeling that the countryside has something
against me and that one day it will take its revenge.’ In “The
Table”, a recluse in Penrith uses mid-century furniture to lure
city dwellers into a world of ‘depressed farmers with shotguns
and bottomless pits of slurry that will swallow you so hard you'll
never be seen again. And in “The Garages” the pressure of city
living forces a man to become oddly obsessed with empty spaces.
Often funny, often haunting, often profound, Gaffney uses dark
humour and surreal characters to demonstrate a deep understanding
of how places, urban or rural, can shape, influence and sometimes
distort our lives. ‘People who like the countryside tend to
believe in things that aren’t really there,’ says a character
in “The Country Pub”. These are indeed stories about things
that aren’t really there, and this is why they resonate with you
long after you have stopped reading.
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Rivers (Paperback)
David Gaffney, Dan Berry
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R552
R454
Discovery Miles 4 540
Save R98 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Short Circuit fills a real gap in the text book market. Written by
24 prizewinning writers and teachers of writing, this book is
intensely practical. Each expert discusses necessary craft issues:
their own writing processes, sharing tried and tested writing
exercises and lists of published work they find inspirational.
Endorsed by The National Association of Writers in Education, it
became recommended or required reading for Creative Writing courses
in the UK and beyond, including Goldsmiths, The University of Kent
at Canterbury, Glasgow University, John Cabot University in Rome,
Stockholm University in Sweden, Sussex University, Brighton
University, Edge Hill University, Chichester University, The
National University of Ireland in Galway, and University Campus
Suffolk, at Ipswich.
In stories that are laugh out loud funny, cringingly weird and
desperately sad., Gaffney introduces the possibility of momentary
actions that change everything; a swimming man sees a hundred glass
eyes at the bottom of a river; a broken vase causes a couple to
re-examine their relationship with the universe; a zoo with only
three animals makes a man reconsider his relationship to his
surrounding; and a comedian decides to expresses himself through
the medium of smell. Relationships begin, stutter, then crash to
earth, each mundane transaction peeling away the everyday to reveal
a canyon of emotion. Gaffney's characters are awkward, often
disconnected, yet they are also profoundly sympathetic. With great
empathy and generosity he reveals the idiosyncrasies,
vulnerability, yearning, and twisted systems that governs our
lives. In More Sawn-off Tales David Gaffney creates a deliriously
lonely, yet lovely universe where strangers hand you their watch
and an estranged couple try to communicate through paint colour. An
expert miniaturist with the ability to stuff an elephant inside a
flea without the insect noticing, Gaffney is like David Shrigley
meets Curb Your Enthusiasm.
The Half-Life of Songs is the long-anticipated sequel to David
Gaffney's critically acclaimed collection of flash fiction, Sawn
Off Tales, in which he managed to cram whole plot arcs and 3D
characters into tiny broken shards of fiction. In this latest
collection of micro stories, David Gaffney opens up a world where
thinking is illegal, where belly dancers' blood is used to
fertilize tomato plants, where pensioners in leather trousers dance
to two-step garage, and where an architect steals crested newts and
hides them in his bath. The stories are beyond odd yet always
ordinary; a warped backward-talking world of Lynchian surreality,
allowing an emotional insight into the rich interior lives of
social outsiders, the broken and the easily-breakable, perpetually
on the fringes of our world.
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Aromabingo (Paperback)
David Gaffney
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R358
R315
Discovery Miles 3 150
Save R43 (12%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Aromabingo builds on the critical success of David Gaffney's 2006
collection Sawn-off Tales, offering yet more of Gaffney's weird and
edgy ultra-shorts, plus several longer works, so you can spend even
more time inside the baffling, hilarious and sometimes moving world
of a David Gaffney story. Think Magnus Mills mashed with the League
of Gentlemen with a jolt of Mark E. Smithery for grit, and you're
nearly there. Though many of his stories are shorter than a Napalm
Death snarl, these precision-engineered slivers of fiction leave
you with the dying chords of a symphony. They are about the small
people, the tiny Tardis folk with cathedrals inside them, creeping
by unnoticed. These tales will have you laughing like at a Tommy
Cooper video though there's something hideous gnawing at the door
to get in. Be careful, a spoonful weighs a ton.
David Gaffney's compact, surreal tales are filled with poignancy
and wit. Each story goes off like a tiny depth charge in the mind,
leaving you with the trace memory of some new urban myth - comic,
absurd and disturbingly true.
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