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Mammoth Books presents More Than Human (Mammoth Books) ebok
  
  
  21,-
  
After the Ape - Stephen Volk
"The notion of 'what happened next?' following a classic monster movie - probably the biggest and best - was an intriguing one to me," says Stephen Volk, "and not only the initial considerations of public health issues.
"Somehow kicking this off and shadowing its development was reading somewhere that King Kong was Hitler's favourite film. Why?
"Anyway the ape is not the monster in this tale. Far from it."
The Nonesuch - Brian Lumley
Brian Lumley reveals "readers w…
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    Undertittel
    Two short stories by Stephen Volk and Brian Lumley
  
  
  
  
    Forlag
    Robinson
  
  
  
    Utgitt
    15 desember 2016
    
  
  
  
  
    Sjanger
    
      Romaner, Krim, Skjønnlitteratur
    
  
  
  
    Serie
    Mammoth Books
  
  
  
  
    Språk
    English
  
  
    Format
    epub
  
  
    DRM-beskyttelse
    LCP
  
  
    ISBN
    9781472102461
  
After the Ape - Stephen Volk
"The notion of 'what happened next?' following a classic monster movie - probably the biggest and best - was an intriguing one to me," says Stephen Volk, "and not only the initial considerations of public health issues.
"Somehow kicking this off and shadowing its development was reading somewhere that King Kong was Hitler's favourite film. Why?
"Anyway the ape is not the monster in this tale. Far from it."
The Nonesuch - Brian Lumley
Brian Lumley reveals "readers who attended the KeoghCons in Torquay, Devon, will immediately recognize the only slightly disguised location in which this story is set... two previous tales in this sequence ('The Thin People' and 'Stilts') were narrated first-person by the protagonist, an unfortunate fellow who, where weird or unconventional collisions are concerned, appears to be accident prone - in spades! And being a recovering alcoholic hasn't much helped his case, because pink elephants just don't compare with the creatures he's wont to bump into.
"The earlier tales are alluded to, but briefly, which barely interferes with the pace of the current story. As to why I wrote this one: it's simply that I have a fondness for trilogies, let alone outré encounters . . ."
      
        