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Watching Swifts - R. J. Askew

One reviewer loved the poetic style although this person did not normally like to read poems. We feel it will appeal to a wider audience than those who read poetry.
Overall rating - 2 acorns - Highly Recommended.

I've just noticed an acorn discrepancy again - Simon's given it three! ;0)
I must give this one a try - it's been on my kindle for ages!
:0)
I must give this one a try - it's been on my kindle for ages!
:0)
Maybe he's been accepting bribes... ;0)


As much as beer?

R.J. has a lovely way with words,I even read and reread his Author's thread time and again. I agree that one doesn't have to be a poetry lover to enjoy his work.I look forward to discussing this one.
I haven't seen RJ for a while - does he know his book has been chosen?
:0)
:0)


THANK YOU all very much for this gnerous attention.
Will do best to ensure acorns take root. *bows*

Yes, I will be fascinated to answer questions. I will learn from them and may find something to put into a subsequent edit as I don't regard the story as in its final state yet.
I am not precious about my writing so I can take criticism. I know that stories have to find their right level in the reading spectrum.

Form ~ an allegorical novella of some 45,000 words.
Written ~ in about a month in 2000.
Inspiration ~ a philosophical difference of mind with a highly talented and creative lady for whom life is a sorrowful experience.
History ~ the story was rejected by about 30 London agents and remained under my bed for a decade. I have subesequently written three other stories, all longer. My intention with Watching Swifts is to work out how to go about being an indie author.
I am an editor with a news agency in London. Prior to that I was a reporter and prior to that a copywriter.
Fire away!!! I love all aspect of creativity, language, and reading of course.


Thanks for that. I will be mindful about not making spoilers meanwhile.

Form ~ an allegorical novella of some 45,000 words.
Written ~ in about a month in 2000.
Inspiration ~ a philosophical difference of mind with a highly t..."
I forgot to add that I updated the time references in the story during an edit about a year ago. I also deliberate tried to make the language more intrinsicate because of something an agent said to a fellow writer about their book. So Watching Swifts has a deliberately bolshy streak in its DNA.

I love that it was under your bed. I don't really know why but I think that sentence is rather funny

I love that it was under your bed. I don't really know why but I think that sentence is rather funny"
It was maturing, like a fine malt whisky, to now emerged as a tincture of the rarest verve, to be slipped slooooowly by those with the knows to appreciate the swirl of notes poetic within its golden spell. *bows*

Rinaldo Oblequante

Alas, none of them lived to leave a review. Still, there may be a nonsense verse in writing for said 'readers' now that the idea's in my head. Something light n wry on the failings of the top life form on earth.



Thank you .. I will take your advice. Will make it a double camomile.

What is the copyright position on using old paintings as book covers? I'm just starting to consider cover options for my thing set in 18th Century Venice, and a contemporary painting really would be a better bet than anything my stunted art skills could conjure.

What I understand is that normal copyright is for the lifetime of the author/artist plus 70 years. BUT a photo of a painting will have a copyright in its own right, probably to a gallery (and galleries are notorious for not allowing you to take your own photos...)
So it boils down in the end, back to Major Snag No. 1: licensing and money.

No, I think that's just plain breach of copyright.

To be fair, that sounds like pretty brilliant fun.
But bad Andrew for derailing thread. Watching Swifts is awesome - read, discuss, ignore the silly person!

Has anyone else read it yet?
I did and I loved it :o) A beautiful style of writing, very poem like without being a poem. (I spake well good English)


I loved the way you thought you knew the character (this is more Leo than others) then RJ threw in a little bit more information about him, for me it was never what I expected. I really felt for Leo and thought he was a lovely guy but had he been presented at the beginning of the book with all the information we had by the end would my reaction to him have been similar to the park keeper?
That was what I felt most strongly when I finished the book. How we judge people by one fact and don't necessarily take into account all the other little things they do that oppose that one, that they might actually be a different person to how we have pigeon holed them.
(I hope you all understand what I mean)




Kew Gardens in the book is sketched in quite broad strokes, and with a certain amount of license I think (for a start, people seem to wander around the grounds at will, but last time I went there, I had to fork over well over £10 for the privilege of getting in), but the real world setting gives a solid grounding to a very reflective and abstract piece of work.

Kew Gardens in the book is sketched in quite broad strokes, and with a certain amount of lic..."
I'm only on chapter 2, but the portraits of the characters seem so intensely focused (and why wouldn't they be between an artist and a photographer) that they are very much foregrounded away from the backdrop of the gardens. The swifts are to populate the skyscape above, but the gardens so far consist more of ice cream stalls, bins, abandoned buildings for nookie and a tree that claimed a human life, than the delicate petals of any flowers, or greenhouses teeming with well green...

What is the copyright position on using old paintings as book covers? I'm just starting to consider cover options for my thing set in 18th Century Venice, and a contem..."
Hi Andrew .. I've stuck a copy of my orig cover on my profile. It's a Leonardo sketch in chalks, astonishingly, very, very soft on the eye >> http://www.goodreads.com/photo/author...
Everytime I look at it I wish that it still was my front cover. But .. getting permission to use such an image commercially is a tricky matter. And I don't think the New York Met, where the image is, wld grant it to a small time indie ebook author. To start with you have to telex your approach to them, which wld seem to suggest they are not keen.
The sketch is over 400 years old, yet it cld be of a woman reading her Kindle on London's Metropolitan line today.

What I understand is that normal copyright is for the lifetime of the author/artist plus 70 years. BUT a photo of a painting will have a copyright in its own rig..."
Yep that sounds right. The copyright is in the photographic image and they are not going to give that away without a big wedge of greenbacks.

What is the copyright position on using old paintings as book covers? I'm just starting to consider cover options for my thing set in 18th Century Venice, and a contem..."
Leonardo used just red and black chalks to create the image. There is barely a distinct line to be seen in it. He achieved the achingly beautiful softness of the image by using a piece of stale bread as a sort of rubber. So taken was I with the image I bought some chalks and .. The result was a failure of course. But studying the image was the purest of pleasures. The tilt of the head, the cast of the eyes, everything about it just feels oh so right. And while the image was created almost 500 years ago, I swear to you it cld be the face of a young woman reading her Kindle on the London tube today.
That said, when I realised I cld not use the image as a cover, I convinced myself that the image was too drab for the modern eye. And so to the orange, a feel good colour, and coincidentally a key colour in amazon's house style. I made the art work for my present cover. The worst moment came when some glue I was using dried in such a way the art work corrugated before my eyes. The background orange was actually achieved by messing around with a piece of gold card from some Dior perfume presentation box. At least I definitely own the copyright for that image.

Then you'll know that the parakeets boss the skies of Kew now (along with the planes sidling into Heathrow). Everything about the parakeets is offputting, esp their calls, which seem to scratch the air. The last time I was at Kew a British robin was singing in the Palm House. The amplification of its song in the glasshouse was astonishing. It was as if the robin had retreated into the glasshouse to escape the raucous parakeets.
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Watching Swifts has been given two acorns by our very own review group. The review group works hard throughout the month to bring an unbiased quality recommendation to the group.
If you are looking for something special you can't go far wrong in choosing an Oak Tree recommendation!
Watching Swifts