Non-librarians are welcome to join the group as well, to A place where all Goodreads members can work together to improve the Goodreads book catalog. (less)Ī place where all Goodreads members can work together to improve the Goodreads book catalog. I can feel my engines revving up again, though. I went on a spree for five years, but haven't written a word in six months - largely due to having a crazy busy day job and three kids. I started off with a lot of literary short stories, then veered into what I do now. I didn't really get serious about producing until I was about 30, though. Probably not, although my mum assures me she liked it. It involved a young lad who, oddly enough, could push buttons to make anything happen: flip up a football pitch with 21 robots to play with and so on. I recall writing a short story when I was eight, called My Push Button World. It's not quite the first, so somebody has already stomped this virgin snow, but it's pretty close. Thanks for taking the time to ask a question. It's not quite the first, so somebody has already stomped this virgin snow, but it's pretty …more Hi Rachael. Possibly even less so, given our penchant for experimenting on animals. I do find it funny that lots of people find the idea ridiculous, when it is no more ridiculous than human zombies. Everything flowed from the original title - Forget the Cud, They Want Blood, which became the tagline. That is the cow (which kills more people each year than sharks). The cow angle came because I needed a big, bad, dangerous animal of sufficient quantities in the developed world. Which, of course, made no sense given the nature of viruses. One night, in discussion with friends over wine in Budapest, I realized there were no zombie animals. I'd always loved zombies, and so decided there was potential in there. Back in 2006, I was writing serious literary fiction, in short form, and getting rather bored with it all. Back in 2006, I was writing serious literary fiction, in short form, and …more Hello Jessica. He won Fish Publishing’s 2008 international One-Page Fiction Prize with We Will Go on Ahead and Wait for You. ![]() Michael’s short fiction has appeared in publications such as The Telegraph, Chapman and Underground Voices. Since then, the sequel, World War Moo, and two unrelated novels, Wannabes and Hell's Detective, have hit the shelves. His debut novel, Apocalypse Cow, won the Terry Pratchett First Novel Prize. Michael Logan is an award-winning Scottish writer, whose career has taken him across the globe.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |