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A01=Brian Fogarty
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Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Brian Fogarty
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Brighton
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DC
COP=United Kingdom
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Language_English
PA=Available
Price_€10 to €20
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Hub

English

By (author): Brian Fogarty

HUB: a collection of five new symphonic long poems previously unpublished. The title poem is about a man in a wheelchair by the side of a road who gets a fleeting glimpse of a girl in the hub cap of a car. He becomes obsessed with her and tries to find her. The other four poems include BOOK - inspired by the author's own published epic novel RED OVER BLUE, a religious/political mystery thriller and story of forbidden love and its brutal consequences which he wrote after two years living and teaching English in Sudan. BOOK is written from the viewpoint of the Muslim girl who was a main protagonist in RED OVER BLUE, forty years after the English teacher who was also a central character and whom she inspired to write RED OVER BLUE returned to England and she believes has died. See more
Current price €14.44
Original price €16.99
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A01=Brian FogartyAge Group_UncategorizedAuthor_Brian Fogartyautomatic-updateBrightonCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=DCCOP=United KingdomDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysLanguage_EnglishPA=AvailablePrice_€10 to €20PS=Activesoftlaunch
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
  • Dimensions: 140 x 218mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Jun 2016
  • Publisher: Oyster PressBrighton
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780953445684

About Brian Fogarty

Brian Fogarty was born in Hackney in the East End of London where he spent his childhood. He moved to Ealing West London and joined the rock band The City Lights as lead singer aged 18. Aged 20 he met and fell in love with a girl 'Wossy' (diminutive of Jocelyn ) from Buenos Aires Argentina at a house called Almora in Ealing West London. That same summer two of his Jamaican friends Wiley and Earle encouraged him to write songs and poetry. Five years later he wrote his first novel The Cage. He studied acting at Questors Theatre Ealing under the founder the late Alfred Emmett and formed his own company The Intimate Theatre. He wrote directed and acted in a dream play with music and nude ballet entitled Journey into Autumn at The Oval House Theatre London with costumes and stage design by Richard Lomek. He went to live by the sea near Chichester where he continued to write poetry and short stories reading voraciously while he supported himself with a number of jobs e.g. washing up factory labourer hod carrier warehouseman postman farm labourer and photographic model. He met a beautiful Jewish girl Christine and his feelings for her inspired him to turn his hand to drawing and painting. He studied TEFL for a year at Chichester College of Further Education and then went to live and teach English for two years in Sudan where he learnt Arabic from his Sudanese neighbours and researched his epic novel Red over Blue a religious/political thriller and story of forbidden love and its brutal consequences set against the background of civil war and famine and the cultural political racial and religious conflicts the sparks of which lit the flames which have spread throughout much of Africa the Arab world and to the West. He returned to the UK living in a Cambridge bedsit near the botanical garden where he wrote several drafts of Red over Blue (at this time entitled The Chrysalis) and taught English privately as well as at local language schools. His short story The Greenhouse was published in the literary magazine Panurge to much controversy and critical acclaim. One of his poems The Nightdress was accepted by the late Alan Ross and published in his prestigious London Magazine. Brian Fogarty moved to Brighton in 1990 and continued working on Red over Blue. Inspired by his new surroundings he also started work on three other novels notably his bizarre and trippy Brighton thriller The Feeders. He took up painting and drawing again and was awarded the David Rose Prize by the Sussex County Arts Club for his painting That Blue Dress which was chosen as the most outstanding entry at their Brighton Festival Exhibition 2005. In 2013 he had his first solo retrospective exhibition of his paintings at 28 Cork Street Mayfair London. In 2014 he was awarded the Chalk Gallery Poetry Prize for his poem 'Everest' which came third in the Sussex Poets Competition (2013) judged by the award-winning poet and academic Dr John McCullough. His collection of stories and poems The Greenhouse was published by Oyster Press in 2006 followed by two of his novels The Feeders and Red over Blue and two poetry collections This Side Up (2010) and Jacksonville Daze (2011). Ongoing projects include a big novel entitled Personae Separatae after the Eugenio Montale poem and which is also the title of the triptych of paintings he completed 50 years after meeting 'Wossy' who inspired both the novel and the paintings.

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