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Guy N. Smith
I had my first story published in a local newspaper at the age of 12, followed by 55 more before I was 17. It was a good start to a writing career and I owe much of it to my mother (historical novelist E.M. Weale) who gave me every encouragement. My father, though, was insistent that I followed... show more

I had my first story published in a local newspaper at the age of 12, followed by 55 more before I was 17. It was a good start to a writing career and I owe much of it to my mother (historical novelist E.M. Weale) who gave me every encouragement. My father, though, was insistent that I followed family tradition and went into banking.Hence it was twenty years later before I became a full-time author and I had some catching up to do. The 1970's were a boom time for pulp fiction and I made my debut with 'Werewolf by Moonlight' (NEL 1974). It was 'Night of the Crabs', though, which really established me as a writer, virtually overnight in that memorable record, hot summer of 1976. This title was the 'No.1 beach read'. It saw numerous reprints, spawned 5 sequels along with several short stories, as well as a movie.'Night of the Crabs' enabled me to go full-time. At the time with my wife, Jean, and our four children we were living a reasonably conventional life in Tamworth, Staffordshire. It was time to move on though, and in 1977 we moved to our present home in a remote part of the Shropshire/Welsh border hills.I was no stranger to country life though, and the further away we were from town and traffic the better. For many years I had been writing for the 'Shooting Times' and several other sporting publications. Then in 1999 I accepted the post of Gun Editor of 'The Countryman's Weekly'. This involved 4-5 articles per week and I relished the challenge.By this time pulp fiction was virtually out of fashion so diversification suited me, yet my readership has remained faithful to me and technology has made it all possible again with e-books. Thus my backlist is steadily returning to electronic print along with some new books. It is an exciting time.
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Birth date: November 21, 1939
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The Professor
The Professor rated it 8 years ago
“They're as big as bloody cows!” Rocket fuel for schoolboys. A good, defiantly trashy, stepping stone between Enid Blyton and James Herbert (via Graham Masterton’s The Wells Of Hell) and just the thing to get 11 year old boys going gosh-wow again at prose fiction. Read it as an adult and it’s naïve,...
runner
runner rated it 10 years ago
This book was part of a number I picked up when helping my daughter no 2 decorate her new flat. Having not read anything by Guy N Smith before (living in the UK...not having read anything by Guy N Smith...where have I been!) I was eager to jump right into this fine example of late 70/80s horror. I w...
Konnici na Liriite - Chevalier Du Lys
I was tempted in created a new bookshelves called something like "How NOT to write a book".If you are a woman then you shouldn't read this. There was only a woman and every single scene she was in - she was on someone like a dog on a bone... The last scene she enters there was no "action" but we wer...
Mandrake's Cabinet of Readables & Curiosities
I bought a book in this series as a kid because the cover art was so awesome. I never got around to reading it, so while in a nostalgic mood recently I bought it cheap on kindle. I realise that this book has gained cult statis by pulp horror fiction connoisseurs (oxymoron?) but I mustn't be one of t...
Amadan na Briona
Amadan na Briona rated it 13 years ago
GIANT, EVIL CRABS INVADE WALES!This is Guy N. Smith:I can't tell if he's trying to be serious here, but he's a very seriousprolific author who seems to be going gangbusters with the ebook rights to his out-of-print pulp paperbacks.So, is he a sadly underrated British writer whose work deserves wider...
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