Sam Jordison - MBA Literary Agents
Transcription
Sam Jordison - MBA Literary Agents
Sam Jordison Sam Jordison is a hugely talented, bright, young writer. He was co-editor of the bestselling Crap Towns and the follow-up book - Crap Towns 2 - as well as writing four solo titles. He writes a regular books column for The Guardian. Books: Sod That: 103 Things Not to Do Before You Die Book agent: Susan Smith Publisher: Orion Published date: September 2008 Book category: Non-Fiction For anyone who is fed up of being told what to do with their time, or made to feel inferior because they don't want to fly half way round the planet on the off chance that a dolphin might swim somewhere their vicinity, this is the perfect book. A slacker's bible, it is the anti-list book in a world where we are surrounded with too many lists - '101 Things to Buy', '50 Things to do in Keighley' offering us all too many very avoidable treats. Who has the time to read all these lists, let alone follow up on the suggestions? Is it really such a good idea to touch a tiger? All these ludicrous suggestions should be treated with the contempt they deserve. In short, this is a very funny rallying call for common sense and dignified indolence rather than wasteful over-activity. Now comes the final and best list book of all time, easily trumping those books with 100 or 101 things to do, as Life's Too Short comes up with the top 103 things not to do. You know it makes sense. Bad Dates Page 1 of 5 Book agent: Susan Smith Publisher: John Murray Published date: November 2006 Book category: Non-Fiction Love, as the poets have been telling us since the beginning of time, is never easy. And finding love is next to impossible. How can you locate that special someone when everyone out there is so awful? And what could be worse than finding Mr or Ms Right - and them finding you utterly wrong? Dating is generally a ritual of humiliation. And when dates go wrong, they go really wrong - with hilarious results. Sam Jordison invited people to submit their tales of dating woe to his website www.whendatesgobad.co.uk, which went live on 3 February. Within ten days it was so popular it was reported in The Independent and featured on Wogan's Radio 2 breakfast show. Sam was also interviewed on Radio 5's lunchtime news, the World Service, RTE 2 in Ireland and so many local radio stations he could hardly speak by the end of Valentine's Day. This Christmas a compilation of the best stories of ruptured stomachs, hideous faux-pas and so much more is now available in a side-splitting giftbook. Crap Towns: The Top 50 Crap Towns of Britain Book agent: Susan Smith Publisher: Boxtree Published date: October 2003 Book category: Non-Fiction "Crap Towns" is a humerous guide to the 50 worst towns in Britain. From inner city poverty to self-satisfied middle England, from the dull and the lifeless to the ugly and the depressing, no Page 2 of 5 concrete monstrosity or phoney heritage centre will be left untouched. This title will prove that Britain isn't just the place of warm beer, cosy bed and breakfasts and amiable old gits that some travel books would have us believe. With burnt out cars, shell suits, cheap shoe shops and housing estates patrolled by rabid dogs and feral kids, Britain can be every bit as challenging a destination as the places gap year students and "serious" travellers' usually go for their poverty and misery kick. "Crap Towns" started life on the website of "The Idler" magazine when readers were asked to write short pieces on awful places they knew and despised. The idea captured imaginations throughout the internet community, receiving countless word-of-mouth recommendations from websites, chat rooms and weblogs. It is now a regular feature of "The Idler" and consists of statistics, anecdotes, history and other bits of info sent in by readers.The book selects the top 50 crap towns in Britain and reveals them in Crap Towns II: To Hull and Back - A Nation Decides Book agent: Susan Smith Publisher: Boxtree Published date: October 2004 Book category: Non-Fiction From inner city poverty to self-satisfied middle England, from the dull and the lifeless to the ugly and the depressing, Dan Kieran and Sam Jordison are back with a brand new list of towns - and this time it's personal. Inspired by the success of the contentious survey, published in the Idler and in book form in Boxtree's smash hit Crap Towns, residents of the original 50 towns, along with plenty of new towns will have their say in Crap Towns II: To Hull and Back on why Britain isn't just the place of warm beer, cosy bed and breakfasts and amiable old gits that some travel books would have us believe. This brand new list of 50 towns will include new entries, non-movers and a new number one based on the public's reaction to the burnt out cars, shell suits, cheap shoe shops and housing estates patrolled by rabid dogs and feral kids that scar the face of this glorious kingdom. Are the disgruntled residents of Hull right to consider their town the worst place to live in the country? Crap Towns II will find out. The Joy of Sects: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sects But Were Afraid to Ask Page 3 of 5 Book agent: Susan Smith Publisher: Robson Books Published date: November 2005 Have you always longed to join a cult but find yourself baffled by the huge choice? Which group has the most interesting dress code? Will the membership fees be too steep? The answers to these and many other questions are found in Cults. An explicit and fully illustrated handbook for anyone curious about the mysterious ins and outs of religious belief, author Sam Jordison's witty and often astonishing field guide takes in every compelling and bizarre faith system from Freemasonry to Matrixism, Scientology to Kaballah. Few news stories lodge in the memory more vividly than the discovery of new cults and their frequently cataclysmic madness, least of all the massacres at Waco and Jonestown or the Tokyo subway gas attack. Countless films and novels have been produced about hidden societies, Satan worshippers and the occult, and for every one that hits the news there are dozens that people just don't know about - until now! Annus Horribilis Book agent: Susan Smith Publisher: John Murray Published date: November 2007 Book category: Non-Fiction Mistakes, mishaps, cock-ups - they just aren't given the recognition they deserve. They make life interesting and human beings (some more than others) have a genuine flair for them. So why does history only record the world's dull and worthy achievements? Annus Horribilis sets the record straight by celebrating good old-fashioned failures. From the man whose spectacular escape from prison was spoiled when he was eaten by a crocodile to the husband who choked to death on his own wife, via several exploding whales, numerous celebrity meltdowns and countless predictions that proved to be wholly inaccurate, Annus Horribilis proves once and for all, that there's no success like failure. Page 4 of 5 Page 5 of 5 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)