M.D. Eyre's Blog, page 2
July 5, 2012
Foreword Clarion review for Tabnit Gisgo
ForeWord Clarion Review
FICTION: HISTORICAL
Tabnit Gisgo: The Gisgo Memoirs Volume I: 323 BC-321 BC
M. D. Eyre
CreateSpace
978-1-4701-2092-4
Four Stars (out of Five)
What George MacDonald Fraser and his Flashman character did for Victoria’s England, M. D. Eyre and his similarly cowardly, selfish, oversexed rogue, Tabnit Gisgo, does for Alexander the Great’s world empire. Written with tongue planted firmly in cheek, this first in what the author promises will be a long series of memoirs by his octogenarianinformer/spy/assassin/soldier/unrepentant rapscallion is an absolute delight. Eyre is more than a humorist or an adventure storyteller. He knows his history because he lives and teaches in the area where much of the action of his novel is set. Historical purists and devoted fans of Alexander the Great and his generals may cringe at Eyre’s scathing descriptions of the world conqueror as “Alexander the Unhinged.” They may groan at some of the puns and pinpricks Eyre tosses around about “fratricide being Macedonian royalty’s strong suit” and of how the revered historian Herodotus was “nothing but a disgraceful gossip,” but it is all in good fun—and possibly not far off the mark.
The debunking of legendary figures of history dates back as far as Aristophanes, who set quill to papyrus a century and a half before the title character of Eyre’s Tabnit Gisgo was born. As that Greek who is celebrated as the “Father” (or the “Prince”) of Comedy knew twenty-five centuries ago, poking fun at great people is hard work; the writer has to know his subject,
perhaps even better than a biographer or historian. He also has to know his audience and how much satire they can digest without becoming weary of the humor the writer is serving up. Eyre comes dangerously close to filling that bowl of satirical stew to overflowing, but he repeatedly manages to catch himself just words before going over the top. “Our ancestors, who, least it be forgot, were a worry to sheep in times gone by,” is one such quip that some readers may feel flows over the brim, as does Tabnit Gisgo’s musing of how “I yearned like a eunuch for his lost bits.”
Eyre’s humor is very British, much like George MacDonald Fraser’s or even the writers of Monty Python, but it also contains a solid kernel of truth. Alexander, after all, was, as Gisgo “writes” in this supposed memoir, “an absolute despot” and “a man of ruthless resource who [knew] nothing but triumph and adulation and who, with the wave of a hand, [summoned] enough henchmen, assassins and executioners to depopulate half Asia in various imaginative ways.” Gisgo, like Fraser’s Flashman of the nineteenth century, is an everyman, one with an innate sense of which facts are truth and which are pure puffery, and a determination for self-preservation.
More concerned with where his next meal will come from and who will warm his bed than what primped-up peacock will next sit on a gilded throne, Gisgo is a character with whom many readers can identify. Indeed, he is a scoundrel of the first order, a reprobate of great renown, and more a coward than a hero, but Gisgo is most importantly a survivor. In times of war and upheaval, when tyrants run amuck and “great” men turn prosperous cities into barren
deserts, survival is both a skill and a necessity, and one worth emulating.
M. D. Eyre has given a world of readers a hilarious yet also very relatable character whose antics and tricks may help them as they, like Gisgo, struggle to survive in uncertain times.
Mark G. McLaughlin
FICTION: HISTORICAL
Tabnit Gisgo: The Gisgo Memoirs Volume I: 323 BC-321 BC
M. D. Eyre
CreateSpace
978-1-4701-2092-4
Four Stars (out of Five)
What George MacDonald Fraser and his Flashman character did for Victoria’s England, M. D. Eyre and his similarly cowardly, selfish, oversexed rogue, Tabnit Gisgo, does for Alexander the Great’s world empire. Written with tongue planted firmly in cheek, this first in what the author promises will be a long series of memoirs by his octogenarianinformer/spy/assassin/soldier/unrepentant rapscallion is an absolute delight. Eyre is more than a humorist or an adventure storyteller. He knows his history because he lives and teaches in the area where much of the action of his novel is set. Historical purists and devoted fans of Alexander the Great and his generals may cringe at Eyre’s scathing descriptions of the world conqueror as “Alexander the Unhinged.” They may groan at some of the puns and pinpricks Eyre tosses around about “fratricide being Macedonian royalty’s strong suit” and of how the revered historian Herodotus was “nothing but a disgraceful gossip,” but it is all in good fun—and possibly not far off the mark.
The debunking of legendary figures of history dates back as far as Aristophanes, who set quill to papyrus a century and a half before the title character of Eyre’s Tabnit Gisgo was born. As that Greek who is celebrated as the “Father” (or the “Prince”) of Comedy knew twenty-five centuries ago, poking fun at great people is hard work; the writer has to know his subject,
perhaps even better than a biographer or historian. He also has to know his audience and how much satire they can digest without becoming weary of the humor the writer is serving up. Eyre comes dangerously close to filling that bowl of satirical stew to overflowing, but he repeatedly manages to catch himself just words before going over the top. “Our ancestors, who, least it be forgot, were a worry to sheep in times gone by,” is one such quip that some readers may feel flows over the brim, as does Tabnit Gisgo’s musing of how “I yearned like a eunuch for his lost bits.”
Eyre’s humor is very British, much like George MacDonald Fraser’s or even the writers of Monty Python, but it also contains a solid kernel of truth. Alexander, after all, was, as Gisgo “writes” in this supposed memoir, “an absolute despot” and “a man of ruthless resource who [knew] nothing but triumph and adulation and who, with the wave of a hand, [summoned] enough henchmen, assassins and executioners to depopulate half Asia in various imaginative ways.” Gisgo, like Fraser’s Flashman of the nineteenth century, is an everyman, one with an innate sense of which facts are truth and which are pure puffery, and a determination for self-preservation.
More concerned with where his next meal will come from and who will warm his bed than what primped-up peacock will next sit on a gilded throne, Gisgo is a character with whom many readers can identify. Indeed, he is a scoundrel of the first order, a reprobate of great renown, and more a coward than a hero, but Gisgo is most importantly a survivor. In times of war and upheaval, when tyrants run amuck and “great” men turn prosperous cities into barren
deserts, survival is both a skill and a necessity, and one worth emulating.
M. D. Eyre has given a world of readers a hilarious yet also very relatable character whose antics and tricks may help them as they, like Gisgo, struggle to survive in uncertain times.
Mark G. McLaughlin
Published on July 05, 2012 05:28
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Tags:
foreword-clarion, novel, review, tabnit-gisgo
July 4, 2012
Big Brother Kindle is watching you...
Published on July 04, 2012 08:41
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Tags:
amazon, kindle, the-guardian
July 3, 2012
Stephen King#3 Rage
The 3rd part of a really good series about Stephen King's books.
This is Rage, the only King book that is out of print.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
This is Rage, the only King book that is out of print.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
Published on July 03, 2012 08:51
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Tags:
rage, stephen-king, the-guardian
My new website
Well, after much wailing and gnashing of teeth, I finally managed to get a website up and running.
Here it is and any feedback would be gratefully received.
http://mdeyre.com/Home.html
Here it is and any feedback would be gratefully received.
http://mdeyre.com/Home.html
July 1, 2012
Women getting turned on by 50 Shades
The below the line comments on this article are very funny and very revealing about the 50 Shades success.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
Published on July 01, 2012 09:16
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Tags:
fifty-shades-of-grey
June 27, 2012
#badwritingtips trended on twitter
Published on June 27, 2012 06:43
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Tags:
twitter
June 19, 2012
fifty shades of grey-a few alternative reads
If you're, erm, 'into' Erotica a few alternative reads to the current bestseller.
Liked the comment below the line asking why for the middle classes books like this are called 'Erotica' while for the working class it's 'porn'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
Liked the comment below the line asking why for the middle classes books like this are called 'Erotica' while for the working class it's 'porn'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
Published on June 19, 2012 08:30
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Tags:
erotica, fifty-shades-of-grey
June 15, 2012
The importance of good editing
Really good article about editing and the notion that a book is never really finished
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
June 12, 2012
Quiz: were these sex scenes written by men or women?
Published on June 12, 2012 20:26
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Tags:
the-guardian
June 11, 2012
Salem's Lot by Stephen King
If you're a fan of Stephen King check out these series of articles that will re-visit each of King's books in publication order.
This is Salem's Lot.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
The first in the series was Carrie.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
This is Salem's Lot.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
The first in the series was Carrie.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/...
Published on June 11, 2012 06:34
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Tags:
carrie, salem-s-lot, stephen-king


