Richard Cubitt

Richard Cubitt

About

I reside in England and in August 2013 I graduated from the Open University with a First Class BA (with Honours) degree in English Literature.

I'm a fan of all genres of literature. Some of my favorite authors are as follows:

Classics - Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Dumas, Dickens, Milton, Dante, Henry James, George Eliot, Hardy, H.G. Wells, Virginia Woolf, Bram Stoker, Mary Shelley, Edgar Allen Poe, H.P.Lovecraft.

Contemporary Literary: John Banville, Ian McEwan, J.G. Ballard, Cormac McCarthy, Martin Amis, Bret Easton Ellis, Philip Roth, John Fowles.

Sci Fi - Arthur C. Clarke, Asimov, Dick, Frank Herbert.

Fantasy - Tolkien, Philip Pullman.

Peter and the Whimper-Whineys

Peter and the Whimper-Whineys

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Description

<span style="line-height:115%;font-family:Calibri, 'sans-serif';font-size:11pt;"><span style="font-family:Calibri;">Peter and the Whimper-Whineys is about a small rabbit who whines all the time. His mother cautions him that if he keeps on whining and crying, he’ll have to go live with the Whimper-Whineys. One night Peter hops into the dark forest.<span>  </span>He meets some Whimper-Whineymen and discovers that not only do the Whimper-Whineys whine all the time, but they are very ill-mannered and rude. He discovers that everything is sour in Whimper-Whineyland and decides his mother was right! If only he can get back home… a recent critique, “Though there are other books out there for children about whining, I cannot imagine any parent or guardian not wanting to read this book to their child!... <span> </span>Parents everywhere applaud you!” </span></span>

Story Behind The Book

Reviews

<p>'This is an interesting and varied collection with which I was very impressed. A lot of which would actually make good longer stories. On occasion the author provides a brief introduction to a story that allows a glimpse into the writing process i.e. ‘Prologue’, an experiment written with a novel in mind; ‘The Earth’s True Children’. With ‘Silk’ there are two versions, the shorter of which I think loses something in the trimming.<br /> As for the other stories, I thought ‘The Grief of Lawrence Gould’ and ‘Masks’ were very good and thought provoking, but perhaps a bit wordy in places. ‘Through the Eyes of a Child’: hard-hitting and the shortest short story I’ve ever read. However, by far the best and worth the purchase alone is ‘Hideous Humanity’, a brilliant, caustic rant, detailing the slow and inevitable decline of a perfectly normal everyday man as he rails against the stupidity, banality and fading morality that we are all faced with day after day. It gripped me, made me laugh out loud, made me think. I truly hope the author writes the next instalment. Well worth reading' - John Prentice</p>