Doug MacLeod (1959–2021)
Author of The life of a teenage body-snatcher
About the Author
Works by Doug MacLeod
Tales Of Tuttle: The Fantastic Adventures Of Professor Tuttle And His Friends, Old Bill, Miss Purdie And Mac Tavish (1986) 5 copies
Bilge, a musical play about convicts being transported from England to Australia in the year MDCCCXXXVIII (1988) 1 copy
You Can't Take My Blues 1 copy
Exactly Like This 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1959
- Date of death
- 2021-11
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Victorian College of the Arts
- Occupations
- children's book author
young adult writer
screenwriter
script editor
playwright
comedy writer - Nationality
- Australia
- Birthplace
- Greensborough, Victoria, Australia
- Place of death
- Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- Associated Place (for map)
- Victoria, Australia
Members
Reviews
What a sweet, funny, endearing, captivating story! I traded for this book because I liked the title, having just renewed my interest in old Cat Stevens' songs. I had no idea what this book was about, except that it seemed to be written for readers under the age of 18. I found myself laughing so often and each time I did, I loved the characters even more. I liked how Seth got along with his parents, how his relationship with his brother was realistic, how the old hippie mindset played into show more the story (the walls of the house, peeing on the lemon tree, the songs, the frankness of sexuality), and how different Seth's views on attractive girls were compared to the usual Young Adult book.
I kept being reminded of the scene in the movie Donnie Darko where Donnie walks Gretchen home from school. The atmosphere and emotion of the story was very much like that scene - sweet, funny, real, flirty-nervousness in the boy's part, confidence in the girl's part. That's my favorite scene in the movie but it only lasts about a minute. Moonshadow takes that minute and extends it, which is very satisfying. :)
My only complaint is that the book wasn't longer. I read it in one night - it was that enjoyable. I would welcome a sequel or a series of Seth books. This is a book I will be keeping in my library, reading many more times, and recommending to others. Oh, yes, I should say ... I'm 44 yrs. old! show less
I kept being reminded of the scene in the movie Donnie Darko where Donnie walks Gretchen home from school. The atmosphere and emotion of the story was very much like that scene - sweet, funny, real, flirty-nervousness in the boy's part, confidence in the girl's part. That's my favorite scene in the movie but it only lasts about a minute. Moonshadow takes that minute and extends it, which is very satisfying. :)
My only complaint is that the book wasn't longer. I read it in one night - it was that enjoyable. I would welcome a sequel or a series of Seth books. This is a book I will be keeping in my library, reading many more times, and recommending to others. Oh, yes, I should say ... I'm 44 yrs. old! show less
To echo some other reviewers of this novel - wow. This was not what I was expecting at all. Doug Macleod has penned a very sophisticated and involving story indeed. I was totally captured by the story of Colin Lapsley and the "shiny guys".
The setting is a psychiatric hospital in 1985 and Colin is seeing things no-one else sees (shiny guys) on the periphery of his vision. His parents have hospitalised him following a family tragedy and little by little we learn about how Colin came to be show more where he is. Colin's friend, Mango, has his own set of problems that mainly centre on him randomly hugging people and not letting go. It doesn't bother Colin. Eventually Mango calms down and lets go. Then Anthea shows up. Reserved and focused on shooting 100 netball goals a day, she is drawn into Colin and Mango's circle.
Colin is an eloquent and clever narrator and at times you start to wonder if the shiny guys are real - he certainly believes they are.
Bit by bit we learn more and more of Colin's story, and those of Mango and Anthea. My heart cried a little bit at each revelation, as I further understood how these things had come to be.
I won't post spoilers, as is my policy, but as I read the last pages over breakfast this morning and then reached the end, there was slamming of the book on the table and lots of "WHAT? Seriously? Aaargh!" from me. I will be interested in hearing comments about that ending from others. I loved and hated that ending simultaneously.
I can't wait to see where Doug Macleod goes from here, because The Shiny Guys is brilliant.
Recommended for ages 14 and up. show less
The setting is a psychiatric hospital in 1985 and Colin is seeing things no-one else sees (shiny guys) on the periphery of his vision. His parents have hospitalised him following a family tragedy and little by little we learn about how Colin came to be show more where he is. Colin's friend, Mango, has his own set of problems that mainly centre on him randomly hugging people and not letting go. It doesn't bother Colin. Eventually Mango calms down and lets go. Then Anthea shows up. Reserved and focused on shooting 100 netball goals a day, she is drawn into Colin and Mango's circle.
Colin is an eloquent and clever narrator and at times you start to wonder if the shiny guys are real - he certainly believes they are.
Bit by bit we learn more and more of Colin's story, and those of Mango and Anthea. My heart cried a little bit at each revelation, as I further understood how these things had come to be.
I won't post spoilers, as is my policy, but as I read the last pages over breakfast this morning and then reached the end, there was slamming of the book on the table and lots of "WHAT? Seriously? Aaargh!" from me. I will be interested in hearing comments about that ending from others. I loved and hated that ending simultaneously.
I can't wait to see where Doug Macleod goes from here, because The Shiny Guys is brilliant.
Recommended for ages 14 and up. show less
This is an amusing read with a winning hero and some convincing period detail(it is set in England in 1828. I enjoyed it but the ending felt rushed and tacked on. As if Mr. MacLeod's imagination (normally capable of great flights of fancy)has suddenly deserted him.
Adam has a lot to deal with - his Grandfather just passed away, he's met a new girl who may or may not think he's funny; and his little brother who has Aspergers may take everything that he says literally. Set in a seaside town where everyone knows everybody else's business, this is a lovely book about first love and families. The tigers on the beach it refers to is a bit random but there...as a joke about Bondi. Adam lives in a resort that an evil real estate agent is trying to twist his show more parents into selling. the grandma comes and stays in one of the cabins after the grandpa dies and then does weird things late at night because she can't stand the possums. With guests dropping off, maybe his parents will have to sell after all. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 34
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 428
- Popularity
- #57,055
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 17
- ISBNs
- 90
- Languages
- 2
















