Devon Pubs: A Pictorial Retrospective
Andrew Swift and Kirsten Elliott
Book
From moorland taverns to ancient coaching inns, and from harbourside hostelries to backstreet...
Doctor Who - Philip Hinchcliffe Presents: Volume 2: The Genesis Chamber
Marc Platt, Philip Hinchcliffe, Ken Bentley and Andy Hardwick
Book
Philip Hinchcliffe, acclaimed producer of Doctor Who (1975-77) returns to tell new stories for the...
Hitting a Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick
Book
‘Genius’ Alice Walker ‘Rigorous, convincing, dazzling’ Zadie Smith on Their Eyes Were...
Morgan Sheppard (926 KP) created a post
Jan 19, 2022
Morgan Sheppard (926 KP) created a post
Jan 22, 2022
Owl
Book
The owls are not what they seem. From ancient Babylon to Edward Lear's The Owl and the Pussycat and...
The Moths are Real by Serafina Steer
Album
Serafina Steer plays a harp and sings in a dew-fresh style that lends itself well to storytelling....
ClareR (5721 KP) rated Black Leopard, Red Wolf (The Dark Star Trilogy #1) in Books
Apr 2, 2019
This isn’t an organised band of Merry Men (they’re not all men, and they’re not very merry, to be honest), and they really don’t seem to like one another very much.
Tracker, the main character, is something of an anti-hero. He doesn’t seem to really know why he’s on this quest at the beginning (but that soon changes), he has a low opinion of his fellow companions, and likes nothing better than a good fight and good sex (there is a lot of both). The characters of the Leopard and the children were there to show the softer side of Tracker, I think, although Tracker is as much infuriated by Leopard as he loves him (he wouldn’t admit to that though!)
I can’t wait to see where Marlon James takes this story in the second part of this series. I’ll most definitely be reading it!
Adventures of the Mad Monk Ji Gong: The Drunken Wisdom of China's Most Famous Chan Buddhist Monk
Guo Xiaoting and John Robert Shaw
Book
Follow the brilliant and hilarious adventures of a mad Zen Buddhist monk who rose from humble...