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The Stillman
Tom McCulloch
€ 11.99
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Description for The Stillman
Paperback. Jim Drever is a man apart, his closest relationship with the machinery he monitors in the distillery where he's worked for twenty years. He treats everything else with bleakly humorous contempt. It's the emails from Cuba, made up of letter Num Pages: 286 pages. BIC Classification: FF. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 198 x 131 x 21. Weight in Grams: 272.
Jim Drever is a man apart, his closest relationship with the machinery he monitors in the distillery where he's worked for twenty years. He treats everything else with bleakly humorous contempt: his fading marriage, the increasingly bizarre behaviour of his teenage son; his daughter's impending wedding. He can deal with all that in his own way. It's the emails from Cuba, made up of letters from his dead mother, that threaten to bring down Jim's ordered world.
Jim Drever is a man apart, his closest relationship with the machinery he monitors in the distillery where he's worked for twenty years. He treats everything else with bleakly humorous contempt: his fading marriage, the increasingly bizarre behaviour of his teenage son; his daughter's impending wedding. He can deal with all that in his own way. It's the emails from Cuba, made up of letters from his dead mother, that threaten to bring down Jim's ordered world.
Product Details
Publisher
Sandstone Press
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2014
Condition
New
Weight
28g
Number of Pages
286
Place of Publication
Dingwall, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781908737670
SKU
V9781908737670
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-50
About Tom McCulloch
Tom McCulloch has published poetry and short stories in various journals including Other Poetry, Northwords, NorthwordsNow, Eildon Tree, Markings, Buzzwords, and Wilderness magazine (New Zealand). He was long-listed for the Herald/ Imagining Scotland short story competition 2011.
Reviews for The Stillman
' How do the pieces of a life fit together?' This is the key question that protagonist Jim Drever has to answer as he negotiates family dysfunction, workplace rivalries and emotional journeys. In The Stillman Tom McCulloch chronicles lives veering between sourness and cynicism, energy and optimism, and does so with acute observation and wickedly black humour.' James Robertson, author ... Read more