Avatar for David Beeson

David Beeson

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first registered 01.04.11

last online 346 days ago

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about me

Years in marketing have meant my writing a lot but never anything literary - I was going to say fictional but press releases aren't always entirely factual. So I took up blogging a couple of years ago and writing novels set in the world of small companies, combining I hope strong story lines with a view of everything that can go wrong in that strange world which so many people inhabit daily.

favourite books

Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is something I can read and re-read, along with Persuasion and Northanger Abbey. For brilliant stories well written, I go for John Le Carre, particularly the Smiley novels, A Perfect Spy and The Little Drummer Girl. For brilliant stories written appallingly but great entertainment all the same, Nevil Shute.

my websites

http://www.davidbeesonrandomviews.blogspot.com     http://www.healthcareconsiderations.blogspot.com

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my books

Good Company

David Beeson

Hope, ambition and a woman take a young man into business in London in the nineties; he finds betrayal, business failure, suicide and a murder.


In England in the nineties, London and the business world seem to offer the prospect of greater success than teaching in Newcastle, in the North East. With an experienced woman to open many new doors for him, a young man leaves his teaching job to come south and pursue his hopes. Unfortunately, an adventure with a woman at work shatters his belief in the strength of his love. A still greater shock, however, comes with the discovery that his girlfriend has been even more profoundly untrue to him. Meanwhile, there is a further blow when a boss he has painfully learned to admire is killed. Many suspect the death was a suicide brought on by the animosity and successful opposition of the company Chief Executive. When that Chief Executive is killed himself, in eerily similar circumstances, it begins to looks as though the company is under a curse and, indeed, the downhill slide continues inexorably. Ultimately alone and facing redundancy, the young man is happy to abandon his earlier glowing ambitions and return to teaching. Before he leaves, however, one more revelation awaits him, one that will allow him at last to understand the events he has witnessed.

 

my friends

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latest

love4044 wrote 124 days ago

Hi, I am Vera! please how are you! hope you are fine and in perfect ....

ndayery wrote 196 days ago

(rafica_4ndaye@yahoo.com) My name is rafica i saw your profile toda....

Jack Cerro wrote 248 days ago

Hi This is an invitation for you to post a least one paragraph o....

Dwayne Kavanagh wrote 310 days ago

Hi David, Help ‘A Killer’s Kind’ get back on the desk.... In Grant....

JohnDoe wrote 349 days ago

I’m very sorry if I’ve previously messaged you, but I’ve had one of t....

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my comments

latest

I wrote 381 days ago

Criticism (at least of the positive kind, i.e. that don't leave me feeling sui- or homicidal, and that I can actually do something about) would be most welcome whether I've invited it or not. And your comment was most helpful - that was a stupid error on my part, now fixed. If you have other, mor... view book

I wrote 382 days ago

Criticism (at least of the positive kind, i.e. that don't leave me feeling sui- or homicidal, and that I can actually do something about) would be most welcome whether I've invited it or not. And your comment was most helpful - that was a stupid error on my part, now fixed. If you have other, mor... view book

I wrote 382 days ago

Many thanks, Bob - that's much appreciated. I'll get on with completing the next one as quickly as I can - it's great to get your kind of encouragement (your kind encouragement, actually), not least because it'll be a spur to getting with things. view book

I wrote 399 days ago

Many thanks, Audrey - much appreciated. I suppose the main movement of 'Good Company' is the disabusing of the main character of his naivety... I'll certainly look at 'What lies within' - no doubt a good way of spending some time over the Easter weekend - and get back to you. David view book

I wrote 402 days ago

Many thanks, Simon - much appreciated. I'll take a look at the start - that's a helpful view - and see whether I can get to the action a bit more quickly. Funnily enough, my son made much the same comment... clearly I need to address the problem view book

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