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Cliff James

Goodreads Author


Born
in Beckenham, The United Kingdom
September 02

Website

Twitter

Genre

Influences
Salman Rushdie, Margaret Atwood, Angela Carter, John Fowles.

Member Since
June 2012

URL


Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

Cliff James was born in Kent, England, and spent his childhood in East Sussex. He has been the News Editor at the gay lifestyle magazine 3SIXTY, Editor of the LGBT newspaper one80news in Brighton, and Secretary of the Gay And Lesbian Humanist Association. His first published short story, The Violence Of The Gardener, appeared in A Casualty Of War: The Arcadia Book Of Gay Short Stories, edited by Peter Burton, in 2008.

His first magical-realist novel Of Bodies Changed was published in 2014. The following year, his short story, The Half-Way House, appeared in the anthology, Speak My Language, edited by Torsten Højer. He has published poetry with local arts
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Cliff James Atlantis, definitely. I'd want to find out why the imagined continent sank beneath the waves. I'd expect it wasn't a natural cataclysm at all, but rat…moreAtlantis, definitely. I'd want to find out why the imagined continent sank beneath the waves. I'd expect it wasn't a natural cataclysm at all, but rather - as with the UK and the USA today - more prosaic, political reasons: the rise of hate, of dictatorial clowns, nascent fascism: good people doing nothing.(less)
Cliff James Hello Liam. Yes, The Violence of the Gardener was my first published short story. I'll always be grateful to Peter Burton for inviting me to contribut…moreHello Liam. Yes, The Violence of the Gardener was my first published short story. I'll always be grateful to Peter Burton for inviting me to contributeit to A Casualty of War. Have you read it?
Thanks for the question.
Cliff(less)
Average rating: 4.39 · 61 ratings · 22 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
Speak My Language, and Othe...

by
4.03 avg rating — 75 ratings — published 2015 — 5 editions
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Of Bodies Changed

4.35 avg rating — 26 ratings — published 2014 — 4 editions
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The Kindly Ones

4.53 avg rating — 15 ratings — published 2021 — 2 editions
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Life As A Kite

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2019 — 2 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Morning Star reviews The Kindly Ones

Very chuffed that my longtime favourite newspaper, Morning Star, has reviewed and recommended my latest book The Kindly Ones:
"The Kindly Ones by Cliff James, Lethe Press is an extremely well-written account of the damage done to a society that cannot reconcile faith and reason at an individual or aggregate level.
"Highly recommended."
Here's the link to the full review:
https://www.morningstaronline. Read more of this blog post »
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Published on November 12, 2021 10:22

Cliff’s Recent Updates

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It's happened again. Within seconds of entering any book by David Mitchell, it's impossible to hold on to one's own thoughts, one's own ego; this world dissipates and only the world of the author remains. Mitchell is an absolute master craftsman of b ...more
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Profoundly disappointing, the best thing about this novel is the title. Characters are one-dimensional, childishly portrayed and lack basic credibility; important themes (such as climate change, racism, and economic injustice) are artificially name-c ...more
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Quotes by Cliff James  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“One way or another, we spend our whole lives being conditioned into accepting some line or order, some position of domination or subjection. It’s hard to unlearn such hierarchy, to undo such control. It’s implicit.”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“Have you ever wondered why we bury and cremate our dead? Nothing to do with hygiene, it’s just so we don’t have to see the reality of death. You know, the Zoroastrians used to leave their dead in open places for the birds to eat. Now that’s a far more honest way to go, don’t you agree? Everyone can see what happens. It makes us live our lives more potently. That’s how I want to go, at my end: openly. Not ashamed of death, but embracing it.”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“I will simply die, as you will simply die, when our hearts stop beating. And instead of the fires of Hell or the clouds of Heaven, there will be a chorus of hungry worms or fish, depending on how we go. Isn’t that what really terrifies you most of all, why you force yourself against all reason to believe in such tales? It’s because you’re afraid of the nothingness at the end. You’re ashamed of it.”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“One way or another, we spend our whole lives being conditioned into accepting some line or order, some position of domination or subjection. It’s hard to unlearn such hierarchy, to undo such control. It’s implicit.”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“Olympus is still a patriarchy. Zeus heads his royal household as jealously as Jehovah rules his harem of dull, harp-playing angels. Both are templates for order on earth, don’t you think?”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“So, at the turn of the third millennium, you have chosen to base your principles on a collection of contradictory texts – written by various men years after the death of your man Jesus – that have been edited and selected out of hundreds of other documents, and bound together into one hotchpotch volume, under the orders of a political primate, Pope Damasus. And, you’re still content to condemn the living love I feel here and now, because of that dusty accident of bad editing? Why?”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“Have you ever wondered why we bury and cremate our dead? Nothing to do with hygiene, it’s just so we don’t have to see the reality of death. You know, the Zoroastrians used to leave their dead in open places for the birds to eat. Now that’s a far more honest way to go, don’t you agree? Everyone can see what happens. It makes us live our lives more potently. That’s how I want to go, at my end: openly. Not ashamed of death, but embracing it.”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

“I will simply die, as you will simply die, when our hearts stop beating. And instead of the fires of Hell or the clouds of Heaven, there will be a chorus of hungry worms or fish, depending on how we go. Isn’t that what really terrifies you most of all, why you force yourself against all reason to believe in such tales? It’s because you’re afraid of the nothingness at the end. You’re ashamed of it.”
Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed

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