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AndrewStevens

rank: 524

Last week's position: 516

first registered 15.10.11

last online 1 day ago

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about me

I'd just like to say a big thank you to everyone who's taken the time to read The Poet these past few months. I really am most grateful for all the advice, encouragement and support I've received. The generosity and kindness of site members continues to amaze me. Thanks again. A

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I've been an authonomy member off and on since the site opened and, overall, my experience has been very positive.

I've read some wonderful work, received lots of extremely helpful feedback, had three books ranked number one on the weekly chart, even been contacted by an editor at Harper Collins as a direct result of being on the site.

The site may be far from perfect but, as a place to showcase your work and debate the writing process, I can't think of anywhere like it.


In case you're wondering, her name is Amber and no, that's not her hat!

Any interested agents or editors can contact me at: andrewmichaelstevens@hotmail.co.uk

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http://blog.authonomy.com/2011/11/one-to-watch-wed    

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my books

The Poet

Andrew Stevens

Family, forgiveness and the lies people tell.




The Poet knows full well what he is. Doctor Carmichael’s talked about stress, panic, the caustic afterburn of fear and regret. It’s just he doesn’t know why he’s like this. His mother says he’s always been a ‘quiet, thoughtful child’. His step-father thinks it might be ‘a teenage thing’. His brother likes to say he’s ‘careful’ while his sister tends to plump for the blunter, if undeniably more accurate, ‘weird’.

He is weird. Literally so. He was an unusual baby; an easy baby but unusual all the same. He never cried. Not once. Or so the story goes. He just ate and slept and watched, content to allow life to pass him by. He was, according to reverentially recollected family lore, very nearly three before he said his first word. His mother seems to think it was ‘tractor’, although he finds this hard to believe.

He’s always felt different, detached from the world around him, a foreign face in an alien land. Not that he’s complaining. It’s not an unpleasant feeling. In fact, it’s barely a feeling at all.

And then he goes and spoils it all by writing that stupid, bloody poem...

 

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Dear Andrew thanks for your message. Can you please rate and back the....

jlbwye wrote 1 day ago

May I introduce my book, Breath of Africa, which has been languishi....

FRAN MACILVEY wrote 1 day ago

http://www.authonomy.com/forums/threads/93171/fran-macilvey-would-lik....

Adeel wrote 3 days ago

Please read my work and rate it overall: http://authonomy.com/book....

JKass wrote 5 days ago

I was just wondering if you were up for a read swap? My book, 'The H....

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my comments

latest

I wrote 9 days ago

Brian - For my money, I don't think you need to say that Huygens Senior's papers were translated at all. Most readers, I'm sure, will just accept that the original text was written in a foreign language (French, Dutch, Latin, I don't think it matters) and that what they're reading is simply an E... view book

I wrote 11 days ago

PLC Review I really enjoyed this, Brian. On my shelf when I get a chance to shift things around. The prose is terrifically polished and, for the most part, very evocative of the C17th setting. The sheer quality of the writing makes for an extremely reassuring, persuasive read. This clearly isn’t ... view book

I wrote 15 days ago

Fantastic stuff, Andrew. Elegant prose. Real and purposeful dialogue. Subtly evoked sense of time and place. Engaging and original storyline. On my shelf. Thanks and best of luck. A view book

I wrote 15 days ago

Happy to back this again, Robert. It's such a good read, one of my favourite books on the site. view book

I wrote 18 days ago

An interesting read, Heather. I particularly like the descriptions of the desert countryside - terrifically evocative and peppered with some genuinely original, quirkily beautiful phrasing. I also thought some of the conversational exchanges (eg between Leila and the girl at the gas station) work we... view book

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