Showing posts with label Satire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Satire. Show all posts

Review: Bestseller


Author: Ahmed Faiyaz.
Genre: Satire, Humour.
Rating: đŸ«đŸ«đŸ«đŸ«

Blurb:

Akshay Saxena, an out of work editor of a defunct literary magazine in the UK, is told to move to India for a year to help shore up the value of Kalim, an ailing Indian publisher.

Akshay finds himself in a job where he has to do the impossible. Angus Lee, the new owner of Thomson Lee Books, wants at least five bestsellers in the coming year, failing which the business would be wound up.

He has to find a way of making a success out of books he would never publish or would never even read. To complicate things further, he has to contend with motley crew of has-beens and misfits working for the publishing house as well as wannabe writers, dealing with their follies and derisive tactics, and battle his own affections for Zorah Kalim, the impulsive daughter of his former boss.

Will he succeed in bringing out that one ‘bestseller’ from his publishing house? And what about his own life and love in office? Find out in this riveting read.

Cover Review:

The cover is simple, a tad intriguing, but not enough to make me want to pick the book up. 

Book Review:

Bestseller is the story of a guy who ends up in an almost dead publishing house in India after the magazine he used to work for in London shuts down. And to make matters worse, his boss dies on the first day of his job. 

Akshay's story was hilarious and at the same time it reflected everything that is true about the publishing industry in India as well as Bollywood. 

Bestseller was a light read, the kind of book you can read over tea or while you're looking for an easy book that doesn't demand much from you.

My favourite thing about the book was that the romance was only a subplot and that there were better and more important things at play. I also appreciated how the author casually introduced a queer character. 

My least favourite thing could be the fact that the book was so short, but then again, I think it was better this way. 

If you're looking for a peek into the publishing world in India, reading Bestseller would be a good idea. You should also read it if you're looking for a good laugh. 

All in all, Bestseller was witty, short and I'd definitely recommend you to check it out. 


Buy Bestseller Now:






Interview: Philip Becnel, Author of Freedom City


Hey Bookworms!

Today I had the opportunity to have a chat with Philip Becnel, author of the anti-trump satire, Freedom City. 


Before continuing, let me introduce him to you! 



I was born in San Francisco and raised in Cotati, California, but I spent my formative years in New Orleans and then Northern Virginia. I now live in Washington, D.C., where I've been a private detective for almost twenty years.

FREEDOM CITY, an anti-Trump satire about resistance to American fascism, is my debut novel, but some years ago I published two nonfiction books about investigating: Introduction to Conducting Private Investigations and Principles of Investigative Documentation. I've also published articles in a variety of legal and popular journals, including Time Magazine.

Twitter | Facebook | Website | Amazon |

Now! Let's head on to the interview now, shall we? 

What inspired you to write Freedom City? What was the first spark?


After months of fuming about all the bigotry and corruption of the Trump presidency, I re-read The Monkey Wrench Gang, a book by Edward Abbey that really kicked off the environmental revolution in the 1970’s. The book is about some oddballs who wage a guerilla war against companies that are destroying the environment. The topic is dire, but the book is written in a way that readers can actually laugh at the absurdity of the situation. When I re-read that book, I thought, ‘Someone needs to write something like that set in the Trump era’—and that’s what I did. 

How did you come up with the title of this book?

Without giving too much away, ‘Freedom City’ is the name given to a fascist encampment on the National Mall. Politicians and generals like to come up with names for things that are semantically the opposite of what the thing actually is. Think, the ‘Defense of Marriage Act.’ I was going for something similarly Orwellian—a name that fascists would likely use for their home base to make it seem benign. The title is a play on the so-called Statue of Freedom, which currently stands atop the U.S. Capitol building and which was actually completed by a slave named Philip Reid.

Do you prefer reading eBooks or paperbacks?

I read a good amount of both, but I generally prefer paperbacks. For the past year or so I’ve been re-reading my favorite books and also a lot of non-fiction philosophy, which I can get from the library or a nearby used bookstore.

What kind of endings do you like in books, happy or heartbreaking?

I am very desperate to feel something about anything. An ending can be happy or heartbreaking, but it’s got to move me somehow. I suppose my ideal endings are the profound ones—endings that challenge how I previously looked at the world—with a slight preference for happiness.

Have you ever turned a real life person into a fictional character with the intention of killing them off? 

[Laughing maniacally] Freedom City starts at the unveiling of Donald Trump’s posthumous memorial, so that’s exactly what I did. However, Trump never actually makes an appearance in my book, which is more about his followers and his legacy. 

Are you a plotter or a pantser?

I’m a pantser by nature, but I plotted Freedom City. I knew that I wanted the prologue to occur chronologically after the epilogue, and the only way to make this work was to plot the entire book out methodically. 

Which character from Freedom City did you have the most fun writing? Why?

I think Beach Sands was the most fun to write. He’s a middle-aged, alcoholic lawyer with some unconventional sexual proclivities. Beach gave me a vehicle for writing some outrageous things that I’d never say out loud, such as ‘My only problem with the P.C. revolution is there aren’t any fitting pejoratives anymore. I tell you, the only good thing millennials ever did was bring back beards.’ I mean, I don’t really believe that, but sweeping statements like that make me laugh. 

Do you have a specific writing nook? Or do you write wherever inspiration strikes?

I have a desk on which I keep a sword and also a bayonet from an Argentinian AK-47. My desk chair is a repurposed barber’s chair, which feels sort of like a throne. Above the desk is a shield with a photograph of Emmanuel Zapata.

What do you listen to while writing? Or do you prefer silence?

I actually can’t write with music playing or anything. I’m an only child. The weapons on my desk are there to enforce solitude. [Laughing]

Which book's release are you excitedly waiting for?

I devoured the Song of Ice and Fire series, and like millions of others I’ve been anxiously awaiting The Winds of Winter.  I want to read that book so badly that if Ruth Bader Ginsburg and George R.R. Martin were both drowning and I could only save one of them, I’d seriously be tempted to let the Supreme Court sink into the abyss.

What's the most embarrassing thing that happened to you as a writer?

A lot of stuff has certainly humbled me as a writer—like query rejections and occasional lukewarm feedback—but I can’t say I’ve ever been embarrassed about anything. I just had an event in Chicago where the turnout wasn’t as great as I hoped, but I don’t take that sort of thing personally. 

Do you like summers or winters better?

Winters, for sure. I grew up in part in New Orleans, where the summers are brutal. They’re milder where I live now in Washington, D.C., but they’re still uncomfortably humid.

If someone left a one star review for your book, what would be your reaction?

This actually happened! Some guy—I think his name was ‘Anthony’—left me a one-star review on Goodreads. It was pretty suspicious since the guy hadn’t reviewed any other books—only mine. I’m fully aware that Freedom City will be extremely offensive to anyone who supports Trump, so it’s really not too surprising that some people would try to sabotage me.

If you could swap your world with a fictional one, would you? If yes, what world would you rather live in?

Good fiction requires conflict, and I’m not sure I’d want to live in a world with constant conflict. My life is already fraught with conflict. When I’m not writing, I’m a private detective—and the only things worth investigating are inherently contentious. I suppose I might want to live in a children’s book or something, maybe a book with friendly animals who can talk to each other, and lots of hugging.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

I could say ‘working independently’ or something like that, but for me it’s the feeling of accomplishment from writing a book that I really think will become a cult classic some day. I mean, I might step in front of a bus tomorrow, but there are enough copies of Freedom City out there now that the book is bound to stick around long after I’m gone. This sense of immortality has permeated my life, such that I’m now drinking more and caring less about the things that used to incense me.

It’s not a bad life.

Thank you for coming over to my blog! I wish you all the very best for your book!

Want to know more about Freedom City? Here you go!




Author: Philip Becnel
Genre: Contemporary fiction

Blurb:

FREEDOM CITY is an anti-Trump satire that pays homage to The Monkey Wrench Gang.
After Donald Trump unceremoniously dies from natural causes, four misfits from Washington, D.C. who call themselves the Fearless Vampire Killers sever the heads of Confederate statues and wage a comedic guerrilla war on post-Trump America. When President Pence enlists droves of fascist volunteers to crush the “alt-left” uprising, the rebels must risk their lives to run the fascists out of D.C. 
What follows is not only a battle for survival—but a desperate search for remnants of what once made America great. 


That's it for today! See you tomorrow! Happy reading! 






Review: Life Seemed Good...But...


Author: Richard Bell.
Genre: Satire, Humour, Short Story.
Rating: đŸ«đŸ«đŸ«đŸ«

Blurb

A picture of life in and around the Mystee Forest as viewed by a variety of talking animals, strange characters, and the author's twisted perception of reality. Imagine a cross between Aesop's Fables and the Brothers Grimm.

Cover Review:

The cover piqued my interest, and it looks really funny with that jumble of characters.

Book Review:

Life Seemed Good...is a collection of short stories that are sometimes connected to each other while sometimes are not. 

Though the one common thing among them all is that they're all really humorous, sometimes sarcastic, but overall really funny. 

The stories give life to inanimate objects and make them do things that are hilarious, weird and thought provoking. Though I loved almost all of the stories, The Amoeba, The Wizard and Naked Christmas were my favourites. The Spud was pretty funny too, until it got serious. 

The best thing about these stories was that every one of them had some hidden meaning, and though I couldn't uncover all of them, it was sure a fun ride! 

All in all, Life Seemed Good...But...was full of sarcasm, wit an reading it was a whole lot of fun! 


Buy Life Seemed Good now:




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