REVIEWS OF ESCAPING REALITY
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From Angela Haigh,
Canonbie
Geoff - have now finished your book this morning. I cannot
recommend it highly enough to those who wonder if it's for them. Whether
it's our 'thing' or not (and I suspected not for me!) it pushes you to
read on and on and delivers what it promises. Well done. I don't regret
buying it at all! There's a certain Donald Westlake quality to Geoff Nelder's novel. Our hero, Gerry Ricketts has a touch of John Dortmunder about him with the exception that whereas Dortmunder usually did it, Ricketts did not. His imprisonment and subsequent jailbreak and flight across the moors is one of the funniest rollercoaster rides I've ever taken. Nelder's punning is bad enough, but the "naughty bits" will double you over. Incidentally the naughty bits have nothing whatsoever to do with the sheep.
Online Newspaper comments about Escaping Reality: News & Star in Northern England Sheffield Star on the connection between a Sheffield Member of Parliament and Geoff's Escaping Reality Westmorland Gazette a review relating Escaping Reality to the Cumbrian scene
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Reviewed by Bruce Durie, Director of the Edinburgh Science Festival, and author of the successful How to... series among others If you like your prison escape stories written with ironic humour, your international jewel theft books full of quirky musicians and your librarians sexy, this is the book for you. If you're never considered any of these apparently jarring concepts, now's your chance. Ostensibly
a straightforward "I've been framed and I'll As a stiff-necked
literary critic might say, it also underlines the existential meretriciousness
of solipsism. The rest of us might say that it reaffirms the fact that
we are all, ultimately, on our own. But don't let that The book
reads as if it has two parts - the opening mystery/who-dun-it set-up during
which you think "That's couldn't have happened" and "That's
just unlikely" and the second half - more of a thriller - in which
you Comparisons are invidious - and there's no other book to compare it to, anyway - but imagine an Alistair Maclean novel written by Robert Rankin after looking at too many Salvador Dali paintings on a rollercoaster. Or something like that.
Reviewed by Bruce Durie |
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Reviews in the online review site and |
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A review in Compulsive Reader, and I'm told they are very picky! quote: Well written, clever and full of black wit Escaping Reality is a hard
to put down, stylish romp. There are laugh outloud moments, in prison,
on the run, and back in prison again, plenty of twists, a compelling cast,
an evocative setting, and heartbeating drama. This is the kind of book
you can read in a few days or less, and then pick up again for another
round, solely for the pleasure of it.
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