Walking with Camels: A cure for madness

Author:   Tony Howson
Publisher:   Press Dionysus LTD
ISBN:  

9781913961060


Pages:   138
Publication Date:   26 August 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Walking with Camels: A cure for madness


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Full Product Details

Author:   Tony Howson
Publisher:   Press Dionysus LTD
Imprint:   Press Dionysus LTD
Dimensions:   Width: 13.30cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.140kg
ISBN:  

9781913961060


ISBN 10:   1913961060
Pages:   138
Publication Date:   26 August 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"""A lifetime of remote and often dangerous travel is distilled in this remarkable collection of experience and thought. The poems, photographs and narrative shine a light into some troubled corners of the world in a profound, moving and deeply personal way."" Nick Adcock - Journalism trainer ""How glad I am to see the poems 'The playground', 'Easter 1993/2015', 'When Slavic brothers meet', 'Sehnsucht', 'The women's conference...Somalia' and 'Istanbul' in this book."" Felix Hodcroft - Poet ""Rarely has contemporary poetry impacted so personally on me. Howson has known murderously bumpy places, uncertain times and the addictive nature of risk. Behind his eyes are images that do not fade and, in his head, wisdom that doesn't give way to cynicism. Instead, they imbue his verse and prose with a reporter's awareness of truths - political and human - that his trade cannot always adequately reflect."" Geoffrey Seed Author and former investigative journalist ""I'm tempted to say that it's sui generis. The form, as well as the story, is uniquely Howson. The only reference I have is with some of the books of John Berger."" Christopher Hale Non-fiction writer and documentary producer ""When I came to the end, I felt really quite emotional! I like the prose pieces which add interest and context and give a bit of a break from the emotional intensity of the poetry which is really great! There is variety in style appropriate to the subject matter...beautifully illustrated for me in 'Istanbul' but equally present in most of the work. Lovely."" Jane Sudworth - Writer ""This is lyrical thinking from the writer's 'nomadic hopscotch existence', a rewarding journey of words through landscapes, politics and feelings. Here is a man who has stared into the flames, from Somalia to Istanbul, but is also not afraid to talk about the soul or to celebrate a spicy meal with friends. He writes, sometimes elliptically in poetry and sometimes pointedly in prose, of things that seem to be always with us - concentration camps, prisons, rigged elections, sunrises and sunsets, sorrow, dancing and love. I invite you to walk with him in the camels' footsteps. By the end of your journey, you will have learned some wisdom about the strange, unjust and often beautiful world we live in, and you will have made a new friend."" Adam Strickson Writer and theatre director working at the University of Leeds ""It`s one of the most mesmerizing things I have read. In a word, brilliant. It`s a clever, fascinating theme that works, and the intertwining of a vast range of human emotions and experiences holds the reader to the page. A masterstroke."" Beranice Semp- Journalist (retired)"


A lifetime of remote and often dangerous travel is distilled in this remarkable collection of experience and thought. The poems, photographs and narrative shine a light into some troubled corners of the world in a profound, moving and deeply personal way. Nick Adcock - Journalism trainer How glad I am to see the poems 'The playground', 'Easter 1993/2015', 'When Slavic brothers meet', 'Sehnsucht', 'The women's conference...Somalia' and 'Istanbul' in this book. Felix Hodcroft - Poet Rarely has contemporary poetry impacted so personally on me. Howson has known murderously bumpy places, uncertain times and the addictive nature of risk. Behind his eyes are images that do not fade and, in his head, wisdom that doesn't give way to cynicism. Instead, they imbue his verse and prose with a reporter's awareness of truths - political and human - that his trade cannot always adequately reflect. Geoffrey Seed Author and former investigative journalist I'm tempted to say that it's sui generis. The form, as well as the story, is uniquely Howson. The only reference I have is with some of the books of John Berger. Christopher Hale Non-fiction writer and documentary producer When I came to the end, I felt really quite emotional! I like the prose pieces which add interest and context and give a bit of a break from the emotional intensity of the poetry which is really great! There is variety in style appropriate to the subject matter...beautifully illustrated for me in 'Istanbul' but equally present in most of the work. Lovely. Jane Sudworth - Writer This is lyrical thinking from the writer's 'nomadic hopscotch existence', a rewarding journey of words through landscapes, politics and feelings. Here is a man who has stared into the flames, from Somalia to Istanbul, but is also not afraid to talk about the soul or to celebrate a spicy meal with friends. He writes, sometimes elliptically in poetry and sometimes pointedly in prose, of things that seem to be always with us - concentration camps, prisons, rigged elections, sunrises and sunsets, sorrow, dancing and love. I invite you to walk with him in the camels' footsteps. By the end of your journey, you will have learned some wisdom about the strange, unjust and often beautiful world we live in, and you will have made a new friend. Adam Strickson Writer and theatre director working at the University of Leeds It`s one of the most mesmerizing things I have read. In a word, brilliant. It`s a clever, fascinating theme that works, and the intertwining of a vast range of human emotions and experiences holds the reader to the page. A masterstroke. Beranice Semp- Journalist (retired)


Author Information

Tony Howson was born in Slough, UK, on November 14, 1956. Since then, he has lived in 30 different homes around the world and experienced a life of storytelling. He currently lives in Turkey with his wife and daughter. Tony also has three sons and two grandchildren. He worked as a journalist in broadcast and print, but for 25 years has been active in international development, training journalists in Africa, Middle East, former Soviet Union and Asia to make programmes that empower local people and support media development. He has an honorary doctorate for services to journalism from Uzhgorod University in Ukraine. Outside of journalism he has delivered poetry readings and storytelling sessions and courses to help others develop their techniques. He has had a previous collection of poems and essays published, and had work included in anthologies. He has also had three photo exhibitions, held in the UK and Ukraine. One exhibition supported a production of his four-voice performance piece, SHUSH!, performed in Scarborough, one of his favourite home towns. His formative years were spent on Teesside, once known for its steel and chemical industries. He went on to report its decline in the 1980s. He has also contributed to community arts, helping to set up Scarborough Flair, a project leading to a series of productions, based around the spoken word. Other activities included supporting mental health organisations and establishing a pioneering victim-offender mediation project in Sheffield.

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