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"They're dangerous to love, more dangerous to ignore - which girl are you?" Zizzi Bonah's collection of short stories and verses are for those with minds as broad as braggadocio, and nerves hard enough to rival a diamond from the first water. There's the writer who murders words that press upon her page, and serves up a word-corpse poem... There's the optician who extracts salt crystals from her clients' tears, and dashes them on her fish and chips... Not forgetting, the lady who blinks a truth-moment into a picture, she is a living camera... HEALTH WARNING: This book is rather like surviving…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"They're dangerous to love, more dangerous to ignore - which girl are you?" Zizzi Bonah's collection of short stories and verses are for those with minds as broad as braggadocio, and nerves hard enough to rival a diamond from the first water. There's the writer who murders words that press upon her page, and serves up a word-corpse poem... There's the optician who extracts salt crystals from her clients' tears, and dashes them on her fish and chips... Not forgetting, the lady who blinks a truth-moment into a picture, she is a living camera... HEALTH WARNING: This book is rather like surviving your renegade's cooking, and should therefore be taken in small bites. For that reason, it comes with no letter of recomendation! ==> Note: paperbacks may take up to 3 weeks to arrive via post, whereas ebooks are instantly downloadable
Autorenporträt
Zizzi Bonah is a 5ft 3" lass born of Yorkshire parents. She spent seven dedicated years; three busking her self-penned songs on Bridlington, Scarborough and York streets, to then gigging pubs and clubs in and around the North of England, gaining airplay on BBC Radio York and Humberside using her birth name, Ida Barker. A change is as good as a reply, (a line taken from one of Ida's eclectic-electric songs). With this in mind, she chose a new direction - to become a fiction author and create a new writing genre called Phem Phant Noir. In memory to her late grandparents, Ida and Tommy Hullah, who farmed in Nidderdale, the author's nom de plume - merging Bona and Hullah into Bonah.