• Magyck, Mystery and Morality

    A brief discourse on the making of Azimuth so that you know what you are in for! A portly and dry historian is commissioned by an emperor to write a trilogy, a history of the progenitor of all modern morality, a man remembered as The Magus. He reads the first two volumes to the daughter… Know More

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  • Some Reviews of the Azimuth Trilogy

    Reading great book. It is either for learning and information, or for pleasure and escape. Azimuth combines both of these. I was fascinated and transported but also what I learned about meditation and spirituality in this epic has helped me on my own path. It is a must read and must own Andrew, Lord Stone… Know More

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  • “The Devil you say…!”

    We human beings are a credulous lot. We will turn a bush at night, into a lurking monster, the creak of a floorboard into a ghost and some coincidental meeting or act into evidence of Fate. We have invented the history of God, a fairly full life for Christ and sit and shiver in fear… Know More

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  • Janus, the writer

    I thought I’d offer you a debate to be held after Christmas with your arty friends. It is one that can get very passionate, and it is as old as paintings on cave walls. Can you be totally captivated, informed and elevated by the work of an artist who, you discover, is an appalling human… Know More

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  • The Visionary

    You might like to read a whole short story in the hopes that it will seduce you to read other books of mine at www.chronometerpublications.me–> The Visionary By Eric le Sange     Chapter One Jen Cord had not known that she possessed the gift.  It made itself known to her on a day that… Know More

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  • Leveson and the UK

    It is in every author’s interest to contest any attempt by the State to introduce legislation regarding what can or cannot be the subject of media interest. Freedom of the press (TV, art and literature generally) is the cornerstone of a critical society that keeps its politicians in check. Democracy implies ‘the voice of the… Know More

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  • Rock of Ages

    I watched successive television news coverage of the Rolling Stones at the O2 arena the other night and was struck by the ageist tenor of much of it, particularly on Sky. Plucking the main threads from their verbiage I was left with they are very old and they are charging a lot of money. Indeed… Know More

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  • Shadows on the Cave Wall

    I know what Plato meant when he said that we could not apprehend reality directly. Everything is an echo or a facsimile or obscured or misrepresented or a lie. We are islands unto ourselves and though we build bridges to each other’s habitats, we never actually cross to them. Love is our best word for… Know More

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  • Casting Bread Upon the Water

    I made the point some time ago that writing e-books was akin to putting messages in bottles on your desert island when what you really wanted was a full-size steamer to come by and save you (a book publisher). A friend muttered the other day that he did not want to broadcast his thoughts, implying… Know More

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  • Cheating Death

    As you will have read in the last blog, I am writing a novella about what happens when a man is given three months to live. Maybe this preoccupation with death is just my age. Close friends have died this last year. It’s a conundrum to have them alongside me one moment and then not,… Know More

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