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About the Author

Andy Boot began his writing career on Kerrang! magazine, where he tried to write as little about metal and as much about prog as possible. A varied career followed, including non-fiction books on film, true crime and psychic phenomena, as well as novels in sci-fi and thriller franchises. In latter show more years, development work in documentary and unscripted TV kept him away from the printed word, but the chance to put down in print all those thoughts about a band who have made him happy since he was fourteen was just too good to resist. He lives in Essex, UK. show less

Includes the names: Andrew Boot, Andrew Boot

Works by Andy Boot

Associated Works

Salvation Road (2002) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 71 copies
Separation (2004) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 59 copies
Death Hunt (2004) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 57 copies
Hellbenders (2004) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 55 copies
Strontium Swamp (2006) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 44 copies
Atlantis Reprise (2005) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 38 copies
Prophecy (Death Lands #90) (2010) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 35 copies
Ritual Chill (2005) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 31 copies
Point Position (2004) — Ghostwriter — 16 copies
Slayground (2014) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 9 copies
Death Metal (SuperBolan) (2014) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 8 copies
Nigeria Meltdown (Executioner) (2014) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 8 copies
Night's Reckoning (2013) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 7 copies
Rebel Blast (2013) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 5 copies
Savage Deadlock (2015) — Ghostwriter, some editions — 4 copies
Kerrang! 332 (1991) — Contributor — 1 copy, 1 review
Kerrang! 321 (1990) — Contributor — 1 copy

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

2 reviews
Fragments of Fear examines a wide range of British horror films and the stories behind them. The early melodramas of Tod Slaughter right through to Hammer and their rivals Tigon and Amicus, plus mavericks like Michael Reeves, sex/horror director Peter Walker and more recent talents such as Clive Barker, director of "Hellraiser", are all discussed. Films studied range in scope from the sadism of "Peeping Tom" to the mutant SF of "A Clockwork Orange" and the softcore porn/horror of Jose show more Larraz' "Vampyres".Lavishly illustrated throughout, author Andy Boot unravels a tangled history and discovers many little-known gems amid the more familiar images of Hammer, including a wealth of exploitational cinema. Fragments of Fear establishes the British horror movie as a genre which can easily stand up to its more lauded American counterpart in the depth and diversity of its scope. show less

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Works
9
Also by
17
Members
133
Popularity
#152,659
Rating
3.2
Reviews
2
ISBNs
20
Languages
3

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