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Tim Roux

Author of This Could Be Rock 'n' Roll

13 Works 63 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Tim Roux, Tim Hewtson le Roux

Works by Tim Roux

This Could Be Rock 'n' Roll (2012) 10 copies
Harry Walker's Wife (2012) 8 copies, 1 review
The Angel At The Bar (2012) 8 copies
Little Fingers! (2007) 7 copies
The Blue Food Revolution (2009) 7 copies
Missio (2009) 6 copies, 1 review
(Just like) El Cid's Bloomers (2009) 2 copies, 1 review
Girl on a Bar Stool (2007) 2 copies
Fishing, for Christians (2008) 2 copies
Shade Shadows (2010) 2 copies
Missio (2010) 2 copies

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Reviews

3 reviews
Missio begins with a history of Hull trawlers that have sunk over the years. The narrator Stevie Francis should know – this is how he lost his father and grandfather. The key figures in Stevie’s life are his mother, grandmother, Danielle and Felicio, a stalwart of a cat (and I am always a sucker for cats). Stevie discovers he has access to another world when his deceased father appears to him at nights. Stevie’s furtive imagination and extra-sensory perception is further roused by a show more morbid fascination with the former ‘hanging judge’s’ house, situated between his gran’s and his mother’s house. The creepy portrayal of this house as seen through the child’s eyes is superb. When Felicio goes missing, Stevie enlists the help of the Great Macaroni, the magician who has had the ‘hanging judge’s house bequeathed to him. Soon Stevie is being versed by both the ghost of the hanging judge and the Great Macaroni: the judge teaching him facts and the Great Macaroni conjuring and to question reality and things start to get delightfully surreal. By the time he hits puberty, Stevie’s mind can’t cope with too much reality causing a mental breakdown and the loss of a couple of years of his life. Our hero ‘recovers’ by playing the ‘normality’ game but the gift for predicting the future sometimes proves to be a curse, especially where his wife Danielle and her family are concerned.
Tim Roux’s light touch of humour, economic style and sense of the surreal ensure this is a story to remember.
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This is such an easy read, but at the same time it manages to analyse difficult relationships in a very thought provoking way. OK, we only see it from the male perspective, but that in this instance that is a good thing.

The humour is subtle at times, and the interweaving of song lyrics is effective. From a male point of view, it is easy to empathise with Jake, and feel his pain at times.

Another book that is good for the morning commute.
Read this as one of my first ebooks, did not enjoy it at all, started well and went downhill. Characters unbelievable, cockney language irritating. Just did not care about the characters and gave up 3/4 of the way through.

Statistics

Works
13
Members
63
Popularity
#268,027
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
3
ISBNs
17

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