Taskmaster, The Board Game
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(5 - Your task is to grab a copy of this game ASAP!)
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(5- Prepare to shaken and stirred – this is essential viewing!)
Awesomeness ööööö – unforgettable scenes
Laughs ööö – the dry / camp humour is present
Horror ööö – some grimness
Spiritual Enlightenment öö - love eh?
Imagine a world where the earth is becoming hell?
Click below to find out about my dark sci-fi novel...
Writing Community Chat Show host Chris Aggett (@CJAggett) Interview
Matt Adcock (@Cleric20)
Writing can be tough - the creative drain on the brain, the constant re-writes and research, then the quest for publishing and marketing too. That's why it's great when resources and networks spring up to help in a very peer-to-peer kind of way.
I'm a big fan of the Writing Community Chat Show so it was awesome to get to ask the creator and host Chris Aggett some questions.
Hey Chris can you introduce yourself and the show?
Welcome, my name is Chris and I am the founder and host of The Writing Community Chat Show! It is a live streaming podcast on YouTube that is now well into season 7. I have had some of the best indie and established authors on the show to tell us their stories and current work projects.
How did it all come about?
Nevada Noir
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(3 - This 'little' piggy went CHOMP CHOMP CHOMP)
Awesomeness öööö – a couple of great scenes
Laughs ööö – amusing too
Horror öööö – animal attack violence!
Spiritual Enlightenment öö - bacon bites back
Imagine a world where the earth is becoming hell?
maybe click below to find out more in my dark sci-fi novel...
Read my review of The Last House on Needless Street over at the British Fantasy Society CLICK HERE
Buy your copy of The Last House on Needless Street HERE
Check Catriona's Goodreads Page HERE
Preorder / Buy your copy of Love Like Bleeding Out HERE
Find Steve on twitter - he's @stevegone58
Dir. Emerald Fennell
Reviewed by Matt Adcock (@cleric20)
“Even though the gods are crazy / Even though the stars are blind / If you show me real love, baby / I'll show you mine / I can make it nice and naughty / Be the devil and angel, too / Got a heart and soul and body / Let's see what this love can do / Maybe I'm perfect for you…”
Arriving like a shotgun blast of expertly timed catharsis, Emerald Fennell’s Promising Young Woman hits hard with its message that claiming to be a ‘nice guy’ isn’t enough in this world where #MeToo still needs wider engagement.
Meet Cassandra (Carey Mulligan), she’s that girl over there in the bar who looks like she’s so drunk she can’t take care of herself. She’s beautifully dishevelled with her hair loose and her skirt hitched up. This is a woman who really needs someone to call her a reputable taxi and to make sure she gets home safely but having caught the attention of three guys across the bar, they are already discussing who should hit on her.
Jerry (Adam Brody) goes up to her and offers ‘to see her home safely’ but somehow his definition of this is to take her back to his apartment and ply her with kumquat liqueur before forcibly getting her to his bed. Let’s just say that what happens next isn’t what he was expecting…
Following in the spirit of the excellent Hard Candy which tackled the thorny issue of creeps grooming underage girls online – only to end up as a semi-horror story when one girl decides to drug and castrate the seemingly charming scumbag. Promising Young Woman goes for the throat of guys who think they have a right to have sex with women who are too drunk to say ‘no’.
Cassie is a real-life Harley Quinn-esque a really Promising Young Woman who doesn’t play by society’s rules. Having dropped out of medical school, she still lives with her parents – despite them getting her not-so-subtle birthday presents such as travel cases. She works in a dead-end coffee shop much to the annoyance of her boss (Laverne Cox) who keeps trying to get her to do more with her life.
When Cassie meets Ryan (Bo Burnham), a smooth-talking and seemingly genuine potential love interest it unbalances her even further. Can she learn to trust this guy who is prepared to woo her by dancing to Paris Hilton in a chemist shop?
It is a wild ride finding out and the action which gets dark in parts plays out to an excellent soundtrack – which features tracks that will stay with you after the credits roll including a great dark version of Britney Spears’ Toxic and opens with Charli XCx's Boys...
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(5- Essential viewing..)
Awesomeness ööööö – vital and brilliant
Laughs ööö – Some dark fun
Horror ööö – Trigger warning applies...
Spiritual Enlightenment öö - God isn't a man
Imagine a world where the earth is becoming a patriarchal living hell?
maybe click below to find out more in my dark sci-fi novel...
That’s enough plot taster, Whisper Gatherers is a sci-fi young adult-friendly novel that is the first book in ‘The Song of Forgetfulness’ Post-Apocalyptic series. Writer Nicola McDonagh uses a narrative, which as per my first paragraph is a slang-based language that may appear to have typos. They are not, it’s just quirky use of language to build a futuristic world – like a much less controversial A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess!?
There’s lots to enjoy as Adara has to face various trials and dangers – McDonagh ticks the sci-fi staple boxes with aplomb and delivers a fun romp that sets up the other books in series which I’ll have to explore are some point.
A great start to an inventive sci-fi series...
Buy your copy of Whisper Gatherers HERE
BOTH these books are worthy of your time - we're gonna call this fight a points draw!!