Tuesday, February 15, 2022

New poetry collection by Woking poet, Greg Freeman

Greg Freeman's latest poetry collection, The Fall of Singapore, marks the 80th anniversary of the Allied surrender at Singapore to numerically inferior Japanese forces, which led to thousands of deaths of prisoners of war and local workers forced to build the infamous Burma-Thailand ‘Death Railway’. The poet’s father was a railway survivor, and his words can be heard in this book.


(Click on image to read 'blurb')


About the book...

February 15 2022 marked the 80th anniversary of the fall of Singapore, the surrender of numerically superior Allied forces to a Japanese army - a moment that has gone down in history as Britain’s biggest military capitulation.

Woking poet Greg Freeman’s father Ted Freeman was one of the huge number of Allied soldiers taken prisoner. With many others, he was later forced to work on the infamous Burma-Siam ‘Death Railway’. Many thousands did not survive its hardships and brutality.

Greg Freeman

Greg’s father died in 1989, and since then he has been trying to find a way to tell his father’s story. This month he has published a pamphlet collection of poems, The Fall of Singapore, that includes a sequence about the railway. As he says, it has been a long journey and writes... 

“Soon after my father died I went to the Imperial War Museum and asked to see war veterans’ accounts of the Death Railway. I was brought a couple of shoeboxes full of individual memoirs, maybe a few typed sheets, the odd published book. I spent several sessions at the museum going through these, making notes, assembling a picture of what it had been like.

My father had given me some information. In the late 1970s and early 80s we would sometimes talk late at night, and before I slept I would always transcribe what he had said. His words are interspersed with poems in The Fall of Singapore.

Beginning in the 1990s, I was always trying to find a way of telling his story. I tried writing a novel – I had tried writing a few novels over the years – but that didn’t work. Then I attempted to encapsulate the whole thing in a little story which made the shortlist at a Guildford literary festival competition. In 2008 during a brief stop in Thailand, we made a day trip – by train – to Kanchanaburi and the bridge over the River Kwai. After I turned to poetry I wrote a sestina about the Death Railway called ‘Learning By Heart’ which was commended in a Wilfred Owen Association competition. In 2020, around the 75th anniversary of VJ Day, a poet friend suggested I publish a sequence. I thought no more about it until late last year when I realised the 80th anniversary of Singapore was fast approaching. Could this finally be the moment?   

It’s thanks in great measure to Guildford publishers Dempsey & Windle, who have turned it all around with remarkable sympathy and speed, that it has finally happened. Like so many others, my father never expected to find himself in the jungle in Thailand. A line in one of the poems says: “The call of the empire? He had no dreams.”

Dad worked in a succession of Southern railway ticket offices before the war. As it turned out, he worked on the railway before, during, and after the war. I’m not sure that he ever particularly appreciated the irony.

This collection also includes other poems with wartime settings. Thus there is one about the Islamic peace garden outside Woking – formerly a burial ground for Muslim soldiers from both wars – called ‘A Foreign Wood’. But the heart of the collection is the experience of those prisoners of war in Thailand. My book is intended as a tribute to them all – to those who survived, and to those who sacrificed their lives.”     -  Greg Freeman 


ISBN 9781--913329-69-3

Copyright, Greg Freeman, 2022

​Paperback, 210x148mm

50 pages

RRP £8.00

 

 BUY HERE


"...written with reverence and candour and without a judgmental eye, which allows the experiences of everyday civilians to shine clearly through the darkness of war." - ​Antony Owen, Peace poet


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Friday, January 28, 2022

A tribute to the late Knaphill Author - Toby J. Cole

Toby J. Cole's debut novel, 'Beyond the Pales' really deserved a much wider press than it eventually received.  It's a 'must-have book' if you enjoy storylines set in the Woking area, and certainly one, that will keep you hooked right until the end. There was to be a sequel, but sadly, due to Toby's untimely passing, that was never to be.



About the book...

Why is a Forensic Anthropologist murdered in the largest cemetery in Western Europe? Detective Superintendent Pandora Kingdom needs to find out and fast. As well as battling the killer, she has her own demons to deal with. She lost her arm and leg while police mentoring in Afghanistan. Does she still have the strength for the hunt? Assisted by Steve Bridger, an MI5 agent, Guy Hobbs a History professor and the ghost of the soldier who died when she was blown up. She soon finds out that she has choices to make and needs to know who is really on her side. The killer’s trail leads to a secret research laboratory in Porton Down where the victim worked. Is she following the right trail? What experiments are really going on in the woods there? Why does a police inspector kill himself? and what is the link that leads her back to Brookwood Cemetery, as the body count begins to rise. A cemetery that holds a quarter of a million dead souls holds many secrets. What do an order of Orthodox Monks guard so carefully? What are the fields of graves and mausoleums hiding within them? What is driving the killer on? Pandora Kingdom thinks she knows. Does she have the strength left to risk everything?  Or have the parts of herself, left on the dusty fields of Afghanistan, taken more than she can give. 

If you live in Woking and enjoy reading books set in and around the local area, then Beyond the Pales is for you. 

You can find the book on Amazon HERE



Toby Cole


Brief Bio... 

Born in 1961, Toby J. Cole sadly passed away in September 2020 leaving a wife and three adult children. Beyond the Pales was Toby's only novel and is a crime thriller set predominately at Brookwood Cemetery, and in and around Woking, Surrey. He also penned a collection of short stories entitled The Assassination of Hilary Mantel. The Booker Prize winner, Mantel lived in a penthouse at the former Brookwood Hospital in the village, indeed, “just a stone’s throw,” from where Toby lived. Toby spent the first six years of his working life as a registered nurse before joining the Metropolitan Police. Later in his career, he conducted police mentoring in Iraq and armed protection in Afghanistan. He took up story writing after taking early retirement. 


Kirkus' Review of 'Beyond the Pales'...

A debut crime thriller in which a forensic scientist is found murdered in England’s enormous Brookwood Cemetery. Pandora Kingdom is a talented homicide detective in Surrey, England. She’s also a double amputee, having lost an arm and leg to a bomb in Afghanistan. Over 20 years solving murders, however, has made her a tough, go-to detective, so she’s assigned to the case of Susan Thompson. The victim, a forensic scientist with an interest in body decomposition, was found in Brookwood Cemetery. She was shot in the head and her hands were nailed to a gravestone. At the crime scene, Pandora teams with MI5 agent Steve Bridger, who informs her that Susan researched, among other things, how chemical weapons affect pig corpses (since it’s illegal to use human bodies). Eventually, the investigators learn that Susan was fairly promiscuous - with both men and women - and enjoyed living beyond her means. Large money transfers in and out of Susan’s bank account and a storage unit (filled with strange, telling contents) point toward why someone might have killed her. But as fresh bodies begin piling up, the case assumes greater urgency. Did Susan die for the selling of government secrets, angering a lover or both? Debut author Cole begins this new crime series in a striking locale and imbues the narrative with generous historical and police procedural knowledge. The immediately likeable Pandora thrives in a male-dominated field without being completely humourless, like when she asks, “Are you checking out my wooden leg Mr. Bridger?” There’s also a touch of whimsy in scenes when she speaks with the ghost of a soldier named Daniel Sutton. And while the trope of a promiscuous victim is familiar, Cole handles it with subtlety. The narrative’s main flaw is that the punctuation occasionally slips (“What is with, the red tape?”). These moments don’t detract from a smartly paced tale, however, thick with chilly ambience and some thoroughly shocking deaths. The second volume will be eagerly awaited. A truly instructive debut characterised by heart, wit and restraint.


Toby's selection of short stories



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Saturday, January 1, 2022

Harriet Steel's 'Cold Case in Nuala' reaps its just rewards

Since Harriet Steel featured at Writers at the Gate during our 2021 Woking Writer’s Week, she has gone on to release, ‘Cold Case in Nuala,’ the tenth title in her successful  ‘Detective De Silva Mysteries,’ series. The book has already raked in hundreds of positive reviews and ratings on Amazon since its publication last May.



 

About the book…

It’s January 1940 and the day of Nuala’s famous motor rally. Excitement is at full throttle but matters take a dark turn when that same evening, human remains are found buried in a lonely corner of a local tea plantation. Inspector de Silva has a cold case to solve. Add a playboy racing driver, a missing Bugatti and a family scandal hushed up years ago into the mix and he has plenty to think about. You can be sure that whatever happened in the past, now de Silva’s in the driving seat, you’re in for a gripping ride.


        • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published (7 May 2021)
        • Language ‏ : ‎ English
        • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 214 pages
        • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8745688812
        • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 12.7 x 1.37 x 20.32 cm


BUY THE BOOK



 
Brief Bio…

Harriet Steel is a British author who writes a series of widely praised, atmospheric mysteries in a traditional style. A few years ago, she spent time on the beautiful island of Sri Lanka, and this is where they are set, but in the 1930s rather than the modern day, when it was still the British colony of Ceylon. Her love of history, art, and travel influences her writing, and she also published four historical novels before turning to crime.

Born in London, her family then moved to a farm in the country where she grew up. She later studied law at Cambridge University and was a lawyer for many years before becoming a writer. She would love to go back in time and spend a day having lunch with Hercule Poirot, tea with Miss Marple, and dinner at the Ritz with Lord Peter Wimsey.

If you would like to get in touch with her or find out more about her work, here are her social media links: -

 

Facebook – Harriet Steel Author

Twitter - @harrietsteel1

Website - https://harrietsteel.com

Blog - http://harrietsteel.blogspot.com/


                 
                                                              Harriet's other books in the series


                             

 


 

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Season's Greetings


Photo Courtesy: Woking Borough Council

I would like to thank all those authors who have kindly submitted their latest titles and allowed them to be showcased on ‘Writers at the Gate’ throughout the year.

I launched the blog back in March as I felt there were limited platforms available for local authors to promote their own books, particularly if they were self-published.

The blog now proudly boasts a merry band of Woking-based writers who have all been able to see their names and books up in lights in an online environment that has already attracted hundreds of visitors - in fact, many potential readers who would not have otherwise known about our writing.

In the new year, the blog should receive some extra publicity via the national and local press (Watch this Space!) There will also be a 2nd Woking Writers Week in May with other initiatives being considered, such as meetups and book signings. Of course, these will be subject to the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions.

Many thanks for your support throughout 2021 and I would like to wish you all a safe and happy Christmas and a prosperous new year.

 

Mal Foster

(Blog Admin)


* If you are an author local to the Woking area - Please come and join us - You can submit your latest published title HERE



Friday, December 3, 2021

JRC Cox and his debut novel 'Kings of the Land'

Writers at the Gate is pleased to welcome Horsell-based author JRC Cox and his debut novel Kings of the Land to the blog. 



About the book… 

With the land divided by a powerful sorceress and her lords, how can one small boy unite them all and restore the peace? Possibly by doing what everyone least expects - by making friends of his enemies, finding allies in magical folk, and maybe even wielding an enchanted weapon or two. But the question is, will that be enough? As the young squire soon finds out, it’s not just about the power that you wield. What really counts, is what you do with it!


      • Publisher: ‎ Independently published (22 Aug. 2021)
      • Genre:  Fantasy
      • Language: ‎ English
      • Paperback: ‎ 291 pages
      • ISBN-13: ‎ 979-8689268941
      • Dimensions: ‎ 12.7 x 1.85 x 20.32 cm


BUY THE BOOK

 

JRC Cox

Brief Bio…
 

I work in the video games industry by day and write for fun in my spare time. Kings of the Land is my first full novel and is the beginning of an action-adventure series I have planned out. Before that, I warmed up with writing three children's books with my daughter, set in our Farland Valley universe.

Visit Facebook Page


Brief Interview...  

When did you start writing your new book? 

I started on Kings of the Land in 2012, whilst awake in the middle of the night after having my appendix out. 

What was the inspiration behind the book? 

Oddly, Kings of the Land is the prequel to an idea I had for something set in the future. Also, my love of castles played a big part. 

Can you describe your route to publication from concept to completed novel?  

The short version = Seven years of writing, two years of editing with lots of feedback from my wife and friends, more editing and rewriting, trying to find an agent, getting bored of all the rejections, and finally self-publishing Kings of the Land for fun with KDP :-) 

What ideas do you have for any future books? 

I'm now working on Book 2 of the series. That is going a little quicker. I'm up to page 108 after 12 months or so. And I'm still having fun writing. 

Which publishing services (if any) would you recommend? 

Kindle Direct Publishing has been very easy to use. Pro Writing Aid was also very useful for one of the editing phases of my book.


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Thursday, November 11, 2021

Slow Walking with Woking Author Chris Bore

'Writers at the Gate' is pleased to welcome, Woking based non-fiction writer, Chris Bore to the blog, with his latest title Slow Walking.



About the book… 

This book is about Slow Walking. 

This is a short book with a simple theme: that walking is an end in itself, says author, Chris Bore. 

Slow Walking is about walking for its own sake: slowly, steadily, regularly, for the rest of your life. It is about walking through the world, being in and of the world: taking the time to enjoy being there and letting yourself feel what you are doing. 

Walking is back in fashion - the new fitness craze. We are all encouraged to walk more - 10,000 steps a day, to challenge ourselves, to meet the goal of distance and steps. But there is more to life than challenge, and walking is more than an exercise - it is a way of life, a way to live, to re-calibrate your life. 

This book is a ramble: a slow meandering walk through walking! It is not an instruction manual or a book of walks or a walk diary: it is a slow walk through my own personal walking story, that I want to share so that you can discover - if you have not already done so - the pleasure that regular walking brings. 

Slow Walking lets you focus on what you are doing, where you are, how you feel. It lets you be there, in the moment, being active, out in the world, being part of it. It also helps you avoid injury, build a firm base of steady fitness, lose weight, and enjoy the health benefits of fresh air in all weathers: but these benefits are secondary to the main point: Slow Walking is fun!

 

BUY THE BOOK




 About Chris Bore…

Dr Chris Bore is a retired consultant and trainer in DSP (Digital Signal Processing). Author and presenter of many industrial and university short courses on DSP, Chris specialises in presenting and explaining complex technical information in practical, understandable ways without unnecessary reliance on equations and formulae. Chris's courses have been presented to many hundreds of engineers, programmers and technical managers in diverse industries worldwide. 

He is also a popular and entertaining speaker at informal science and technology events such as TEDx and Café Scientific and is a local organiser of his hometown of Woking's Café Scientific. 

Chris is the author of several successful eBooks - on DSP and Image Processing but also on his leisure pursuits of walking and running. Chris's DSP eBooks encapsulate the wide range of his training, consultancy and teaching experience into readable, informative and enjoyable books that are widely and readily available at an economic price. Weirdly, his most successful book - Slow Running - is about running, slowly, so that shows your career doesn't define you even if you think it should. 

Chris started his engineering career with a PhD in the early days of MRI: co-designing and building some of the first MRI scanners and researching their application in medicine. A post-doctoral fellowship at CERN in Geneva extended his experience into designing and building automated and robotic precision measuring instruments. Back in the UK as Technical and then General Manager of a software company, Chris then returned to the engineering field, first in MRI and then with his own company selling DSP systems - which led later to specializing in training engineers and programmers in DSP. 

He has worked as a trainer in DSP to many companies in many countries: regular clients have included the UK and other MoD, GCHQ, Philips, Sony, Yamaha, Nokia, Canon, Honda, Mercedes, and others. In such work Chris broadened his exposure to some of the most innovative and challenging applications of DSP in consumer, medical and defence industries. It also resulted in a wide network of contacts that has helped with student placements, industrial projects, and employment opportunities. 

Chris's current consultancy focus is in medical imaging: specifically in 3D imaging using microwaves. 

Chris is fascinated by the questions that don't get asked and firmly believes that real experts know that they don't know some things. He is deeply interested in learning how to explain complex and subtle things more clearly, and in testing by experiment what may seem obvious from theory. 

Amazon Author Page

 

Brief Interview…

 

1)      When did you start writing your new book? 

I started Slow Walking in about 2014 - shortly after I published my first similar book, Slow Running. 

2)      What was the inspiration behind the book? 

I'd previously published a book on Slow Running, but really I did a lot more walking than running - and walking I think, offers more chance to engage with where you are because you can take your time. I'd lived in a caravan at Warren Farm in Pyrford when I was a baby and toddler, and my mum mentioned I had taken my first steps there, so that set me off on what proved to be a random ramble through walking which became the book. I love that one of the worst reviews I had said the book was just me rambling on - which is, to be fair, what the blurb says. 

3)      Can you describe your route to publication from concept to completed book? 

I'd already published Slow Running, which was an easy success. Slow Walking is different - literally, me rambling on about rambling, a very personal book and much more something I wanted to write than something I wanted people to read - so it was easy to follow the same route through Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing. 

4)      What ideas do you have for any future books? 

I have one in the works called Slow Thinking - but it is taking a while :-) 

My main aim, though, is to complete a popular science book on water: I worked on the early development of MRI which basically looks at water in the human body, and most of my time was devoted to studying water - which is truly weird stuff - and now I am retired I have returned to that and am drafting a book to rave about how cool (sic) it is. 

5)      Which publishing services (if any) would you recommend? 

Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing lets you do what you want rather than fit in with an editor and publishing house. You can make your own mistakes but correct them later - readers get free updates when you issue a new version - and having spent a lot of time in detailed technical writing I really enjoy not having to endure reviewers telling you what to write.