Author name: Scott

Suspect

Anyone who has been a screenwriter for the iconic 1980’s New York police drama Hill Street Blues (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_Street_Blues) has credibility in my book. Robert Crais (http://www.robertcrais.com/) turned to writing novels in 1987 with The Monkey’s Raincoat and has subsequently built up a large body of work. He has stated that “Thematically, again and again my books are about […]

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Revenge

Perhaps it says something about modern sensibilities or modern culture that the reading public likes its thriller fiction ultra hard boiled. This is proven by the phenomenal success of Martina Cole  (she has sold more than 8 million copies)(http://www.martinacole.co.uk/) who delivers gut churning tales from the London underworld. 19  of these gritty novels from the pen of all people –

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Broke

Mandasue Heller was born in Warrington, and became heavily involved in am-dram as a child, and appeared in many plays and pantomimes. She carried her love of the stage through to adulthood, when she toured the working men’s clubs with her country & western band, Missouri Sunshine. She joined Equity during that time, and regularly appeared in

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The Irresponsible Self by James Wood

James Wood’s (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Wood_(critic)) call for a comedic moral seriousness in fiction is handsomely reviewed here http://www.theguardian.com/books/2004/may/22/featuresreviews.guardianreview6   The depth and brilliance of Wood’s insights left me amazed, and I hope they will have the same effect on you. The Irresponsible Self  was first published in 2004. 320 pages in Jonathan Cape ISBN 978-0224064507 James Wood

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Literary Taste by Arnold Bennett

In an age when relativism of judgement is hardly ever questioned it’s a rare experience to go back to a confident assertion that there is such a thing as literary taste, and that this can be cultivated. Arnold Bennett (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bennett) offers a literary canon here. First published 1909. Does it match your expectations? 94 pages in Create

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Touching a Nerve by Patricia Churchland

What happens when we accept that everything we feel, think, and experience stems not from an immaterial soul but from electrical and chemical activity in our brains? That is the question at the heart of this 2013 book by Patricia Churchland (http://philosophyfaculty.ucsd.edu/faculty/pschurchland/index_hires.html), one of the pioneers of neurophilosophy. In a narrative detailing her own personal and

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