Login
TwitterFacebook

Quirks and Foibles

This is our publishing imprint for all kinds of books from memoirs and novels to bird books and poetry. Frankly, anything quirky or indeed foibly. 

 

Mad As A Box Of Frogs
Mad As A Box Of Frogs
Mulbert's first collection of nearly 100 poems is the ideal book to read on the loo. Strictly for adults, this book includes some of Mulbert's classic performance poems like Pierre The Aviator (his version of the funniest joke ever told) and Festival Flatulence ('always take wet wipes in case they get skittery').

Mad As A Box Of Frogs£7.00
Quantity
Dust Wars
Dust Wars
Small town lawyer’s clerk David Levante leads a very mundane existence and is generally pretty content with life. One day, however, his future changes for ever when he discovers that he’s King of the Fairies. So, join David in his journey through Fairyland where he’s
been called from the human world to solve a crisis, the like of which has not been seen for 500 years.
Dust Wars£7.00
Quantity
The Technology Trap
The Technology Trap
Imagine the consequences of the
sudden loss of power and communications world-wide. In North America, where civil breakdown ensues, personal tragedy leads Mark Stephens to find innovative ways to restore order.

In a Britain under Martial Law, food shortages precipitate civil unrest.
Ex-pilot Graham Shelvey enters politics to promote regeneration from the bottom up. How can ‘lifeboat Britain’ be kept afloat?
The Technology Trap£7.00
In Potentia
In Potentia
Another great collection of poems by Alan McLeod. Paperback, 146pp.
In Potentia£7.00
A Brief History of My Time
A Brief History of My Time
A visitor from another time and place takes us through his life on Earth from the Vikings to the Moon Landing and beyond. It's like a brief history of history told by an alien.
A Brief History of My Time£5.00
Wee Meanderings on the Drove Road to Daramach
Wee Meanderings on the Drove Road to Daramach
WEE MEANDERINGS ON THE DROVE ROAD TO DHÀRAMACH is Alan McLeod’s first Collection of very short stories, essays and polemics. Fictional and occasionally philosophical, once again McLeod attempts to capture that most elusive of romantic butterflies – the Highland Geist. McLeod has been described by one Reviewer as mellifluous, by another as blasphemous.
Wee Meanderings on the Drove Road to Daramach£10.00
sitemap | cookie policy | privacy policy | accessibility statement