Fiction has the power to transport us to unknown worlds and new places, and introduces us to characters we might not otherwise have met had we not begun turning the pages.
Here are twelve works of fine fiction by members of the UK’s Irregular Writers Collective, based in Kent, England.
In the thriller Pamela Rawlinson's Husband Changes Planes, Richard Crosfield takes us to the expat community in Colombia, where a change of planes is not the only intrigue on hand. In Pheromone, a police procedural, Ita Ekhaletruo paints a feral portrait of 21st century London using his own horrific palette. Through a Lens Darkly by Katrina Ray exposes us to obsession, fame and voyeurism, reducing the contrast between eye and viewfinder; and Zin Murphy's satirical Bellino takes a deftly humorous swipe at the politics of NGOs, and of lovers. Plus eight more fine stories.
Fiction has the power to transport us to unknown worlds and new places, and introduces us to characters we might not otherwise have met had we not begun turning the pages.
Here are twelve works of fine fiction by members of the UK’s Irregular Writers Collective, based in Kent, England.
In the thriller Pamela Rawlinson's Husband Changes Planes, Richard Crosfield takes us to the expat community in Colombia, where a change of planes is not the only intrigue on hand. In Pheromone, a police procedural, Ita Ekhaletruo paints a feral portrait of 21st century London using his own horrific palette. Through a Lens Darkly by Katrina Ray exposes us to obsession, fame and voyeurism, reducing the contrast between eye and viewfinder; and Zin Murphy's satirical Bellino takes a deftly humorous swipe at the politics of NGOs, and of lovers. Plus eight more fine stories.