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Set in a small Cotswold town, Inspector Hobbes and the Blood is a
fast-paced comedy crime fantasy about the adventures of Andy, an
incompetent reporter, when he is reluctantly working with Inspector
Hobbes, a police detective with a reputation. Andy soon finds
himself immersed in a world where not everyone is human, and a
late-night visit to a churchyard nearly results in grave
consequences, and a ghoulish outcome. An accidental fire leads to
Andy having to doss in Hobbes's spare room. Contending with a wave
of murder, suicide and robbery, as well as Hobbes's weirdness, is
the just the start; he must also get to grips with Mrs Goodfellow,
Hobbes's housekeeper, who collects teeth. Although they are mostly
from humans, she also claims to have some vampire specimens.
However, Andy soon finds her wonderful cooking compensates for her
eccentricities. Despite Andy believing he is coping, he is nearly
unhinged by horror when a stressed Hobbes's concealed nature
reveals itself in an orgy of bone-crunching.Yet, coming through
unscathed, Andy develops respect and admiration for his host, even
when he uses weird, occasionally brutal, methods to begin
unravelling the mystery, which would appear to link The Order of
the Dragon and Vlad Tepes, the original Dracula, to the crime wave.
When Hobbes goes missing, Andy, with the dubious assistance of
Dregs, Hobbes's big, bad dog, and armed with a leg of lamb,
searches for him. Will he triumph over crazed blood lust and human
sacrifice? Can Andy with Hobbes's friends, a binge-drinking dwarf
and a troll who looks uncannily human, save the day? And can Andy
catch vampirism from false teeth? These and other questions may be
answered in Inspector Hobbes and the Blood.
A short collection of silly verse detailing the plethora of perils
that come with being related to Wilkie. Containing six silly poems
of nonsense and two short poems giving the events leading up to the
unfortunate, untimely and unlikely deaths of family members.
Hobbes - Unhuman Omnibus- Books I-IV I - Inspector Hobbes and the
Blood Inspector Hobbes, a monstrous police detective, investigates
grave, ghoulish goings-on. A mad pseudo vampire with the dagger of
Vlad Tepes is behind robbery, and murder. It is a funny tale with a
troll, human sacrifice, blood and great cooking. 'I ought to tell
you, dear, he can get rather wild when he's hungry.' II - Inspector
Hobbes and the Curse Andy becomes infatuated with a dangerously
beautiful woman during Hobbes's investigations into sheep deaths
and the mysterious disappearance of pheasants, which are apparently
connected to a rash of big cat sightings; and something horrible
seems to be lurking in the woods. 'Love may be on the horizon but,
beware; something wicked this way comes.' III - Inspector Hobbes
and the Gold Diggers Unwelcome attention after foiling an armed
robbery forces the Inspector away on holiday to the dangerous
Blacker Mountains, where his accident-prone friend, Andy, stumbles
across something shocking, before falling for an attractive widow.
`I always knew you'd get ahead one day.' IV - Inspector Hobbes and
the Bones Trouble lies ahead for Andy. Is the apparently charming
young woman who attempts to seduce him merely setting him up for
blackmail, or is something even more sinister afoot? Hobbes
certainly believes so, and, though he's not the sort to worry, he
is getting worried. `I was grateful for having been born human.'
Receiving unwanted attention after foiling an armed robbery, the
unhuman Inspector Hobbes takes a long-overdue camping holiday, with
Andy, his accident-prone friend, and Dregs, the delinquent dog. In
the bleak and dangerous Blacker Mountains, Andy stumbles across
something shocking, before falling for an attractive widow, while
Hobbes wonders why an old gold mine has reopened. On their return
to the sleepy Cotswold town of Sorenchester, Hobbes is dumbfounded
when Kathy, a reminder of his hippy days, turns up on the doorstep
with her baggage. Since Hobbes has to solve a gold robbery and
contemplate some perfectly ordinary rocks, Andy must entertain
Kathy while trying to protect his new love from a monstrous
opponent working for the sinister Sir Gerald Payne. Despite his
usual blunderings and an inability to throw straight, Andy displays
genuine courage. Can Andy survive dinner with a vampire? Can Hobbes
recover the gold? And what is Kathy's relationship to Hobbes? This,
the third in Wilkie Martin's unhuman series of fast-paced comedy
crime fantasies will reveal all.
Set in the Cotswolds, this is the next instalment in the adventures
of Inspector Hobbes, Mrs Goodfellow and Dregs, as narrated by the
still disaster-prone Andy Caplet. It is a rip roaring, funny and
moving tale of Andy's infatuation with a dangerously beautiful
woman, starting off during investigations into sheep deaths and the
mysterious disappearance of pheasants. These incidents appear to be
connected to a rash of big cat sightings, and something horrible
seems to be lurking in the woods. Is Andy cursed to be always
unsuccessful in love, or is the curse something much darker,
something that will arouse his primeval terrors?
I was grateful for having been born human' There's going to be
trouble. Andy Caplet's wife goes away, someone is out to get him,
and he loses nearly everything in a storm. Amazing both himself and
his unhuman friend Inspector Hobbes, he heroically rescues flood
victims and uncovers something shocking. Is Andy being set up for
blackmail by the apparently charming young woman who attempts to
seduce him, or is something even more sinister afoot? Hobbes
certainly believes so, and he's getting worried. This is the fourth
in Wilkie Martin's unhuman series of cosy comedy crime fantasies.
Praise for Wilkie Martin 'odd, inventive, and genuinely very funny
indeed' Katie Jarvis, Cotswold Life 'I enjoy how silly everything
is.' Jo Ann Hakola, The Book Faerie
Is another future possible? So called 'late modernity' is marked by
the escalating rise in and proliferation of uncertainties and
unforeseen events brought about by the interplay between and
patterning of social-natural, techno-scientific and
political-economic developments. The future has indeed become
problematic. The question of how heterogeneous actors engage
futures, what intellectual and practical strategies they put into
play and what the implications of such strategies are, have become
key concerns of recent social and cultural research addressing a
diverse range of fields of practice and experience. Exploring
questions of speculation, possibilities and futures in contemporary
societies, Speculative Research responds to the pressing need to
not only critically account for the role of calculative logics and
rationalities in managing societal futures, but to develop
alternative approaches and sensibilities that take futures
seriously as possibilities and that demand new habits and practices
of attention, invention, and experimentation.
Is another future possible? So called 'late modernity' is marked by
the escalating rise in and proliferation of uncertainties and
unforeseen events brought about by the interplay between and
patterning of social-natural, techno-scientific and
political-economic developments. The future has indeed become
problematic. The question of how heterogeneous actors engage
futures, what intellectual and practical strategies they put into
play and what the implications of such strategies are, have become
key concerns of recent social and cultural research addressing a
diverse range of fields of practice and experience. Exploring
questions of speculation, possibilities and futures in contemporary
societies, Speculative Research responds to the pressing need to
not only critically account for the role of calculative logics and
rationalities in managing societal futures, but to develop
alternative approaches and sensibilities that take futures
seriously as possibilities and that demand new habits and practices
of attention, invention, and experimentation.
A short collection of silly verse detailing the plethora of perils
that come with being related to Wilkie. Containing six silly poems
of nonsense and two short poems giving the events leading up to the
unfortunate, untimely and unlikely deaths of family members.
'I was grateful for having been born human' There's going to be
trouble. Andy Caplet's wife goes away, someone is out to get him,
and he loses nearly everything in a storm. Amazing both himself and
his unhuman friend Inspector Hobbes, he heroically rescues flood
victims and uncovers something shocking. Is Andy being set up for
blackmail by the apparently charming young woman who attempts to
seduce him, or is something even more sinister afoot? Hobbes
certainly believes so, and he's getting worried. This is the fourth
in Wilkie Martin's unhuman series of cosy comedy crime fantasies.
Praise for Wilkie Martin 'odd, inventive, and genuinely very funny
indeed' Katie Jarvis, Cotswold Life 'I enjoy how silly everything
is.' Jo Ann Hakola, The Book Faerie
Receiving unwanted attention after foiling an armed robbery, the
unhuman Inspector Hobbes takes a long-overdue camping holiday, with
Andy, his accident-prone friend, and Dregs, the delinquent dog. In
the bleak and dangerous Blacker Mountains, Andy stumbles across
something shocking, before falling for an attractive widow, while
Hobbes wonders why an old gold mine has reopened. On their return
to the sleepy Cotswold town of Sorenchester, Hobbes is dumbfounded
when Kathy, a reminder of his hippy days, turns up on the doorstep
with her baggage. Since Hobbes has to solve a gold robbery and
contemplate some perfectly ordinary rocks, Andy must entertain
Kathy while trying to protect his new love from a monstrous
opponent working for the sinister Sir Gerald Payne. Despite his
usual blunderings and an inability to throw straight, Andy displays
genuine courage. Can Andy survive dinner with a vampire? Can Hobbes
recover the gold? And what is Kathy's relationship to Hobbes? This,
the third in Wilkie Martin's unhuman series of fast-paced comedy
crime fantasies will reveal all.
Set in the Cotswolds, this is the next instalment in the adventures
of Inspector Hobbes, Mrs Goodfellow and Dregs, as narrated by the
still disaster-prone Andy Caplet. It is a rip roaring, funny and
moving tale of Andy's infatuation with a dangerously beautiful
woman, starting off during investigations into sheep deaths and the
mysterious disappearance of pheasants. These incidents appear to be
connected to a rash of big cat sightings, and something horrible
seems to be lurking in the woods. Is Andy cursed to be always
unsuccessful in love, or is the curse something much darker,
something that will arouse his primeval terrors?
Set in a small Cotswold town, Inspector Hobbes and the Blood is a
fast-paced comedy crime fantasy about the adventures of Andy, an
incompetent reporter, when he is reluctantly working with Inspector
Hobbes, a police detective with a reputation. Andy soon finds
himself immersed in a world where not everyone is human, and a
late-night visit to a churchyard nearly results in grave
consequences, and a ghoulish outcome. An accidental fire leads to
Andy having to doss in Hobbes's spare room. Contending with a wave
of murder, suicide and robbery, as well as Hobbes's weirdness, is
the just the start; he must also get to grips with Mrs Goodfellow,
Hobbes's housekeeper, who collects teeth. Although they are mostly
from humans, she also claims to have some vampire specimens.
However, Andy soon finds her wonderful cooking compensates for her
eccentricities. Despite Andy believing he is coping, he is nearly
unhinged by horror when a stressed Hobbes's concealed nature
reveals itself in an orgy of bone-crunching. Yet, coming through
unscathed, Andy develops respect and admiration for his host, even
when he uses weird, occasionally brutal, methods to begin
unravelling the mystery, which would appear to link The Order of
the Dragon and Vlad Tepes, the original Dracula, to the crime wave.
When Hobbes goes missing, Andy, with the dubious assistance of
Dregs, Hobbes's big, bad dog, and armed with a leg of lamb,
searches for him. Will he triumph over crazed blood lust and human
sacrifice? Can Andy with Hobbes's friends, a binge-drinking dwarf
and a troll who looks uncannily human, save the day? And can Andy
catch vampirism from false teeth? These and other questions may be
answered in Inspector Hobbes and the Blood.
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