Monday, December 24, 2007

Interview with Waterstones




This is the publicity shot I've used for my first interview about Queer Fish in God's Waiting Room. A journalist from the Waterstones' website sent me these questions to answer.


What was your favourite childhood book?

If I had one, I can’t remember what it was. I enjoyed writing as a child but I didn’t become an enthusiastic reader until I discovered the Dune books and the novels of Richard Brautigan in my teens.

Which book has made you laugh?

I once cried with laughter on a beach in Cuba reading Don Quixote drunk on mojitos.

Which book has made you cry?

I’ve read books that have upset me – like The Gate by Francois Bizot or Is This a Man by Primo Levi – but I’ve yet to read a book that has made my cry.

Which book would you never have on your bookshelf?

There are plenty of books I’d never buy – novels that don’t match my tastes, say, or political books that don’t reflect my point of view – but there’s no book I’d never read.

Which book are you reading at the moment?

Jesting Pilate by Aldous Huxley.

Which book would you give to a friend as a present?

The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway.

Which other writers do you admire?

Charles Dickens for writing his first 5 novels before he was 30, Friedrich Engels for writing The Condition of the Working Class in England, Robert Tressell for writing The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, and George Orwell for his essays.

Which classic have you always meant to read and never got round to it?

I try and read a classic a year. In 2008 it’ll either be The Satanic Verses or Anna Karenina.

What are your top five books of all time, in order or otherwise?

I wish I had the memory to answer that question properly. Instead, here’s a list of five books I’ve read recently and enjoyed.

Big Sur and The Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch by Henry Miller
The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
One People by Guy Kennaway
Blindness by Jose Saramago
The Thought Gang by Tibor Fischer

Is there a particular book or author that inspired you to be a writer?

When I first met an author socially it was like a bomb hitting its target. It wasn’t what he’d written that inspired me, nor what he had to say about writing, it was simply the thought that if he could do it, why couldn’t I.

What is your favourite time of day to write?

It’s always a good time to write.

And favourite place?

Hot beaches are particularly good for me, but anywhere quiet will do.

Longhand or word processor?

Longhand, every time.

Which fictional character would you most like to have met?

Harry Paget Flashman

Who, in your opinion, is the greatest writer of all time?

Writing isn’t like football or tennis, we don’t have a governing body measuring descriptions of war or turns of phrase.

Which book have you found yourself unable to finish?

I’ve read novels that have bored me from beginning to end, but I’d never think of abandoning one half-way through. I’ll walk out of a film, turn the TV over, or stop an album, but I’ll always finish a book I’ve started.

What is your favourite word?

I like to write with words that everybody uses, so I stalk new phrases instead. Today, for example, I discovered the phrase ‘take owls to Athens’, which has the same meaning as the phrase ‘take coals to Newcastle’.

Other than writing, what other jobs or professions have you undertaken or considered?

Public relations and advertising.

What was the first piece you ever had in print?

A weekly music column in The Macclesfield Express.

What are you working on at the moment?

A novel called The Uncertainty of Friendship.

Sunday, December 09, 2007

The cover for Queer Fish in God's Waiting Room


The press release for Queer Fish in God's Waiting Room

Comedy author gets set to make splash with Queer Fish in God’s Waiting Room

‘Like some stoned new Kerouac, simply brilliant...’Dom Joly.

UK comedian Dom Joly has drawn attention to Legend Press’s new novel, Queer Fish in God’s Waiting Room, calling the surreal comedy ‘simply brilliant’. This endorsement is the latest indication that Queer Fish, by talented new fiction writer Lee Henshaw, is set to make a strong mark in the book world with its fresh style and quirky form of hilarious story-telling. It will be promoted front-of-shop across all Waterstone's, Borders and Books etc branches from the time of its launch in February.

Henshaw originally wrote the book to ask his girlfriend to marry him although the book is far from a standard romance, containing instructions on how to build a blackcurrant bath bong, and featuring a ‘talking fanny’. Luckily the girl in question still said yes and this unusual romantic back-story prompted independent publishers Legend Press to move fast to beat off growing publisher interest. Legend Press is publishing the short novel at the start of February in time for it to be available as the perfect non-mushy and non-traditional Valentine’s Day gift, and all signs point to the novel selling strongly throughout 2008 to become one of the hits of the year.

The quirky comedy has already caught the online world’s attention through a popular blog after the author decided to have 100 copies printed to see how many he could get placed (or ‘shop-gifted’) on bookshop shelves next to his near-namesake Hemingway. He publicised his mission through a blog, which he titled ‘Next to Hemingway’ (www.next-to-hemingway.blogspot.com) and copies were ‘shop-gifted’ all over the UK and around the world. Pictures were taken on each occasion and can be viewed on the blog and also at Henshaw’s ‘Next to Hemingway’ facebook group. Tom Chalmers, Managing Director of Legend Press, commented: “Classically written, yet often unconventional and surreal, this superb book already has a major following as a result of the hugely-popular Next-to-Hemingway blog, and we expect this popularity to grow exponentially when we publish it.

“Set in and around the cities of New York, Mexico and Caracas, Queer Fish in God’s Waiting Room is ‘a cautionary tale for elder brothers and their new girlfriends’. Liam Kerby sets out on a series of three trips with Brother James and his best mate Ed Lover, and on the final journey they are joined by My Claire and Ursula Paradise. This is a story of travelling, fun, and ultimately how – without the use of the right words – new relationships can affect those you thought were unshakable. It’s an often surreal, always brilliant comedy.”

Lee Henshaw lives in London and is married to Claire. He is currently working on a second novel called Phoney Tony, Plastic Lasagne and the Uncertainty of Friendship – a tragicomedy about a young married couple coping with loss. Both this and Queer Fish are represented by Judith Antell of the Antell Agency.

Queer Fish will be out on 2nd February, and will be promoted by Waterstone’s in their 3for2 offer, and also by Borders and Books Etc in their front-of-shop multibuy offers. It is already available to pre-order at www.legendpress.co.uk.