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Click on a book
to read the editorial reviews for of Jeremy Cameron's
Novels |
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Brown Bread In Wengen |
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'The pleasure is intense.
Jeremy Cameron has an unmatched ear for the shady
melodies of London streets. A funny, violent tale.' -
Time Out |
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'His street talk sizzles
with wit and invention. Engaging, eventful and original.'
- Literary Review |
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'A brilliant line in street
patter that confirms Cameron as the Damon Runyon
of North East London.' -
New Statesman |
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'Cameron's hilarious novel
is turbo charged entertainment...Britain's sharpest,
funniest crime writer.' -
Big Issue |
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Cameron has been compared
to Roddy Doyle and it is easy to see why.'
- The Observer |
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'A wonderful
thriller...an absolute cracker, the superb narrative
voice, North East London streetspeak, is so convincingly
done that it makes the residents of Albert Square
sound like Dick Van Dyke in Mary Poppins.' -
The Independent |
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'This is a short sharp shock
of a novel. Cameron renders the speech of disaffected
London youth better than anyone else' -
GQ |
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'Like some distant, downbeat
relative of Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange,
Jeremy Cameron's earthily gripping debut thriller
is a fast, funny trawl through the territory of
London's new outlaw underclass...a masterly piece
of storytelling.' -
Financial Times |
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'With a feeling for street
life that renders it sexy and poignant, and commonly
astute about crime and its causes.' -
Literary Review |
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'Audacious and outrageous.'
- Daily
Telegraph |
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'Swaggering, steaming work.'
- Nicholas
Blincoe, The Guardian |
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'Very entertaining.' -
Razor Smith, Prison Writing |
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Extraordinarily
effective in its depiction of a seedy criminal underworld.
This is Walthamstow's answer to the fifties pulp
fiction of the USA.' -
What's On In London |
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'A
wonderful thriller...an absolute cracker, the superb
narrative voice, North East London streetspeak,
is so convincingly done that it makes the residents
of Albert Square sound like Dick Van Dyke in Mary
Poppins.' - The
Independent |
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