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Baumer - Were it Not for You

Eric Saeger

Ministry & Co-Conspirators - Cover Up

Eric Saeger

Jason Spooner - The Flame You Follow

Eric Saeger

Black Hollies - Casting Shadows

Eric Saeger

Unholy Terrors - The horror writings of Arthur Machen

“…A sinister experiment in the Welsh hills. A daughter born of an unholy communion. A peasant boy terrified witless by a strange tableau in the glade of a wood. A prosperous Londoner discovered raving and destitute on the city streets…”

Michael Palin - Himalaya interview

“…Dodgy dentists. The Dalai Llama. High-altitude polo players. Maoist rebels. Yak herders. Imran Khan. Just a few of the diverse personalities professional funnyman turned adventure traveller Michael Palin met on his epic 125-day journey across the world’s greatest mountain range…”

Ian Rankin - A Question of Blood interview

“…Not many punk rockers will tell you it was a copper that made them what they are today, but bestselling British author Ian Rankin is an exception to this rule. He owes his livelihood to one Detective Inspector John Rebus, a hard-nosed Edinburgh cop….”

Tony Parsons - Stories We Could Tell interview

“…The life I lived at the end of the 70s was 24 hours a day, 365 days a year – you can only do that for so long… I was glad to get out before I was 25, and happy to get out alive…”

Chris Patten - Not Quite the Diplomat interview

“…People sometimes talk and write about foreign affairs as though it was the sort of subject that can only be understood by a secret society of diplomats and politicians. In fact they should be accessible to all of us…”

Jonathan Raban - Surveillance

“…When even Green Day can achieve international success with a Bush-whacking album, then you can be sure that something’s going on in the public consciousness. Jonathan Raban takes a slightly different approach to the subject with his new novel Surveillance…”

Christopher Brookmyre - All Fun and Games Until Someone Loses an Eye

“…
Unlike most people, Jane Flemming, the protagonist of Scottish author Christopher Brookmyre’s novel All Fun and Games Until Someone Loses an Eye, can pinpoint the exact turn of events that transformed her life. A drunken, awkward, and most importantly unprotected bout of unsatisfying sex with her Catholic boyfriend Tom… ”

Tarja - My Winter Storm

“…Europe has yielded a few glum-faced, overly metalized coveters of the Evanescence throne – Norway’s Octavia Sperati, Austria’s hapless, underrated Visions of Atlantis for two….”

Neptune - Gong Lake

Eric Saeger

Baumer - Were It Not For You

“… Fresh off a one-song soundtrack appearance in the Winona Ryder vehicle “Sex And Death 101″ come North Carolina’s Baumer bearing a drywall-bucket full of curveballs….”

Iain Banks - Interview

“…A disturbed teenager slaughtering rabbits and torturing wasps; A futuristic religious leader decapitating his nemesis, keeping the head alive as he uses it daily as a punch bag; A serial killer intent on murdering those who represent the excesses of Thatcher’s Britain.

Just a few examples of the dark, warped and, often perversely funny themes that run through the works of Iain Banks….”

Willits + Sakamoto - Ocean Fire

“…In this, Grammy award-winning piano soloist Ryuichi Sakamoto hooked up with newcomer guitar experimentalist Christopher Willits in one-take improvisations bent on soundtracking the ocean world….”

George Monbiot - The Age of Consent

“…Monbiot, best known to the reading public for his campaigns against global warming, was aiming far beyond “green issues” with this 2003 projected manifesto for the future of the planet. His objective with the book was nothing if not audacious….”

Air Traffic - Fractured Life

“…You know what’s funny these days, you take a band like this, strip off one guitar layer and all the hooky stuff and it’s Instant Bowery Ballroom Indie-rock with no chance in hell of ever getting mainstream love…”

Jeffrey Archer - Interview

“… To say that disgraced politician cum author, Lord Jeffrey Archer, is a controversial character is an understatement. He has been imprisoned for perjury and perverting the court of justice; breached parole conditions; stolen coats in Canada; been accused of insider trading and ripping off charities; and was implicated in Simon Mann’s planned coup in Equatorial Guinea. The list goes on….”

Tangria Jazz Group - Tangria Jazz Group

“…An oddity in terms of both jazz stylings and band makeup, TJG is headed up by dreadlocked drummer Sheryl Mebane, an experimentalist in the arts of smoky-bar-jazz and African beats…”

Amos Tutuola - The Palm-Wine Drinkard

“…The Palm-Wine Drinkard is unlike almost anything else in print. Nebulous comparisons might be made with Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Kafka’s inconclusive parables or Alice in Wonderland, but things behave very differently from even these european gargoyles in Tutuola’s twilight world….”

David Baker - It’s Mawdsley

“…The central concept/main gimmick of It’s Mawdsley is essentially how a book would read if written by the kind of person who would never write a book, a stream of consciousness from someone who is barely conscious…”

Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend

“…There’s a segment of the accounting-undergrad listening class that can’t get enough Death Cabs and Belles & Sebastians, and, with tax time nearing, we owe it to these people to acknowledge the fact that they have ears…”

Athol Fugard - Tsotsi

“…Tsotsi, is a compelling and brutal tale that follows the life of the story’s eponymous protagonist. Set in Sophiatown, Fugard uses the oppression of the apartheid regime as a backdrop for the novel’s main setting: deep-rooted racism, the abject poverty of the black community, brooding violence…”

Hanzel und Gretyl - Zwanzig Zwolf

“…This jackboot-industrial twosome look and sound like they come from the wrong side of the German political tracks, but they’re in fact New Yorkers dressed in the fetish-club duds you’d kill to see at your local karaoke bar. Slowly but surely, more acts are partaking of the noxious Hitler-doom atmosphere first stolen and transmogrified from Skinny Puppy’s genius by Marilyn Manson, ie KMFDM, Combichrist, half of what Dancing Ferret Records is releasing…”

Chris Abani - Becoming Abigail

“…In the UK right now, there is a real taste for true-life biographies about child abuse. Every bookshop has a section dedicated to small volumes with titles like “Please Daddy No”and “A Child Called It”. It’s redolent of Alan Partridge: “I’d like to understand man’s inhumanity to man… and then make a programme about it.” On the face of it, Chris Abani’s novella Becoming Abigail should fit right in there. It is ostensibly about the traumas and abuses suffered by a young Nigerian girl caught up in the skin trade…”

Shirley Hazzard - People in Glass Houses

“…If there’s one quality that defines Shirley Hazzard’s People in Glass Houses, it’s subtlety. This collection of eight short stories is a masterpiece of observation which clearly demonstrates the author’s perceptive wit… Set in the 1950s, amidst the corridors and offices of the newly-created monolithic and meandering bureaucracy of “the Organization” - an American-based concern intent on ‘inflicting improvement’ the world over…”

Raveonettes - Lust Lust Lust

“…It’s not enough simply to let off wall-of-sound grease-fires over pretty 1960s pop songs – anybody can do that. But after listening to Lust Lust Lust with an open – okay, reverent – mind, one could argue that Dutch coed duo Raveonettes have created something not just important but essential…”

Neil Smith - Bang Crunch

“… It has become something of a self-fulfilling prophecy that the publishing industry can’t sell debut short story collections… Because the major publishing houses don’t publish much short fiction – and rarely back it with a marketing campaign when they do – the public quite rightly tends to assume that these short story collections aren’t worth reading. If they were then they’d be making more of a fuss of them, right?…”

Gram Rabbit - RadioAngel & the RobotBeat

“…At first listen, Gram Rabbit’s new LP sounds veritably commercial in comparison to their last two albums, which bet their futures on weird psychedelic quasi-electro. In particular, their 2006 Cultivation album was strangely captivating – no, I’ll just say it, great – on the strength of Jessika von Rabbit’s sexy but unattainable teasing…”

Ross Macdonald - The Barbarous Coast

“…Punctuated by a sharp, dark wit, and twisting subtly through an untold number of well-plotted revelations, this novel shows why Macdonald was considered the natural successor to the likes of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. It also makes for a damned good read…”

Tom Hodgkinson - How To Be Idle

“…Not only is How to be Idle thoroughly entertaining, it should resonate with anyone, except the most puritanical workaholic bores, who has ever questioned how our lives have become to be dominated by work, time, and the need to be constantly doing something, or feeling guilty for being inactive…”

Martin Amis - House Of Meetings

“…Any new Martin Amis book always comes with plenty of baggage, and House Of Meetings is no exception. As his first full-length fiction since 2003’s Yellow Dog, it comes complete with high expectations and the ugly face of his previous achievements leering over its shoulder. You can almost hear the critics sharpening their knives even before it hits the shelves…”

Joseph M Marshal III - Hundred in the Hand

“…For decades the story of the American West has been told from the point of view of the white settlers, the ‘cowboys’ in all those childhood games of Cowboys and Indians. This novel sets out to redress that balance: it’s set in the American West, but it’s told from the point of view of the Lakota people, and is written by a surviving Lakota member…”

Black Mountain - In The Future

“…Indie pseudo-stoner bands are forever treating your average suburban Zep/Sabbath/GNR listener the way Lucy treats Charlie Brown, pulling the football away just when the potential record buyer is about to take the plunge…”

Dub Trio - Another Sound is Dying

Eric Saeger

Insane Clown Posse - Jugganauts

Eric Saeger

Lisa Loeb - The Purple Tape

Eric Saeger

Dengue Fever - Venus on Earth

Eric Saeger

Patty Larkin - Watch the Sky

Eric Saeger

Fight - The War of Words: Demos

Eric Saeger

Various Artists - Well Deep: Ten Years of Big Dada Records

Eric Saeger

ASG - Win Us Over

Eric Saeger

Various Artists - Monterey Jazz Festival: 50th Anniversary All-Stars

Eric Saeger

Arthur Nersesian - The Swing Voter of Staten Island

“…Arthur Nersesian’s The Fuck-Up, in addition to having one of the best slacker-lit titles ever to have been put down on paper, has garnered something of a cult following since its publication in 1997, and rightly so… In comparison, The Swing Voter Of Staten Island is a big disappointment…”

Sarfraz Manzoor – Greetings From Bury Park: Race, Religion and Rock ‘n Roll

“…A young Pakistani-Muslim reared in Britain, Sarfraz Manzoor, once tried to convince his Pakistani-raised father, Muhammed Manzoor, about the wisdom of the young Manzoor spending a summer in the United States. “Why do you want to go to America anyway? Americans are unclean, immoral, look at how little their girls wear,” his father asked. And then Manzoor, whimsy not quite disguising hormonal honesty, notes “I did not want to confess that was one of the reasons why I was desperate to visit…”

Russell Hoban – My Tango With Barbara Strozzi

“…Centre stage is given to a depiction of Barbara Strozzi herself, the seventeenth century Venetian singer and composer of the book’s title, but surrounding her is the paraphernalia of Hoban’s story. There are glass eyes, a baseball bat, the HMS Victory, an astrological constellation and a 24-hour pizza restaurant. And, of course, the basic steps to learn the tango…”

Sontiago - Steel Yourself

Eric Saeger

Lizzy Borden - Appointment With Death

Eric Saeger

Sia - Some People Have Real Problems

Eric Saeger

Led Zeppelin - Mothership

Eric Sager

Genesis - Live Over Europe 2007

Eric Saeger

Blake Lewis - Audio Daydream

Eric Sager

Bigelf - Hex

Eric Saeger

Raine Maida - The Hunters Lullaby

Eric Saeger

Athlete - Beyond the Neighborhood

Eric Saeger

Ed Harcourt - Until Tomorrow Then: The Best of Ed Harcourt

Eric Saeger

Steve Dupont - Therein Lies The Problem

“… the plot sounds like a collaboration between George Orwell and Roald Dahl, but the large cast of curious characters gives the novel a tone that’s more in keeping with Kurt Vonnegut or Philip K Dick. They sometimes tread a fine line between caricature and outright fantasy, but once you buy into the slightly strange world that Dupont has crafted he takes you on a rollercoaster ride quite unlike anything else in modern fiction… “

Andrei Tarkovsky - The Sacrifice

“…The great cinematic martyr, he put life before film to the extent that it is believed he died from cancer having shot an entire film in an area contaminated by radiation (the film had needed a post-fallout look, you see). Tarkovsky didn’t give a damn about himself or money; it wasn’t important to him whether his film was a commercial success, only that he made what he intended…. “

Sir Oswald Mosley: Blackshirt - Stephen Dorril

“… Mosley is inexorably entwined with the story of twentieth century politics as a whole, mirroring the highs and the lows, ricocheting from the machinations of high society to the violent desperation of the underclass, and taking in every major Parliamentary player in between… ”

Austin Grossman: Soon I Will Be Invincible

“… While there are surface similarities between Soon I Will Be Invincible and that TV show, however, the tone of the novel quickly shifts towards the more fantastical end of the spectrum. Grossman makes no attempt to explain the world that he describes – a world where superheroes, and supervillians, exist as a widely accepted everyday reality – but instead he takes this death-defying, spandex-wearing ball and runs with it… “

Douglas Coupland: The Gum Thief

“…Relating the relatively humdrum tale of two ‘associates’ in a Staples stationary superstore, it often sounds like a soap opera rather than the latest offering from one of contemporary literature’s most intriguing voices. The Gum Thief’s relatively mundane surface hides an intriguing study of the epistolary form - and a commentary on the nature of the novel itself. “

William Trevor: Cheating At Canasta

“…It’s no hollow claim to compare his work with Joyce’s Dubliners, and in Cheating At Canasta he’s proved once again that there are few who can come close to him in terms of subtle nuances of feeling and understated epiphanies. “

Caroline Smailes: In Search of Adam

This story is distressing and difficult. It contains no humour that I could detect. It is unstoppably depressing. And yet…”

Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track: The Letters of Richard P. Feynman

Winner of the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics, the bongo-playing physicist Richard Feynman practiced a self-deprecating sense of humor that spoke volumes of the importance of humility…

Rory MacLean - Magic Bus: An Interview


Magic Bus: On the Hippie Trail from Istanbul to India is Rory MacLean’s retracing of the Hippie Trail that marked the beginning of the modern travel industry in the Sixties and Seventies, a six thousand mile trek that now leads through war zones and some of the world’s most chaotic cities.

Curtis Sittenfeld: Prep

“…Curtis Sittenfeld has produced a superb first novel…Comparisons with Catcher in the Rye are inevitable…”

Patrick Humphries: The Many Lives Of Tom Waits

…despite its considerable size, Patrick Humphries’ attempt to delve into Waits’ life only just manages to scrape beneath the surface…”

Matt Ruff: Bad Monkeys

“…the ending almost certainly won’t be what you expect, and it will either convince you that Bad Monkeys is a wonderful tour-de-force, or make you regret having spent so many hours reading it…

Pedro Carolino: English As She Is Spoke

“…This whole book is of course, a “mistake”, and a very extreme one too. But every progression of language develops from mishearing, from distortion. While undoubtedly funny, the undulating incongruity of the language is enough to stimulate realms of the mind previously unexplored…”

Dan Rhodes: Gold

“…across all of Rhodes’s books, short fiction or novels, there’s a strong vein of humour closely entwined with brutality and tragedy…”

The Fall: Reformation Post TLC

“…very much into the bellowing apparently- random- words- as- associational- poetry mode. “Cheese-sticks!” “Goldfish bowl!” “No Newsnight for you Baby!”…”

The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil: George Saunders

“…Saunders manages to amuse, entertain, and shake out thought on a great variety of subjects, and does so in a subtle, sideways style which could so easily be annoying but isn’t…”

Someone To Drive You Home: The Long Blondes

“…with this far less feted CD, the Long Blondes definitely made the best album of that year, on every level…”

Djizoes: “The Erkonos Project”


Red Hot Chili Peppers: “Stadium Arcadium”


Zombi: “Surface to Air”


Gnarls Barkley: “St. Elsewhere”