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Created page with '{{infobox |title= Simon Snootle and Other Small Stories |author= Lorin Morgan-Richards |reviewer= John Lloyd |genre=Short Stories |summary= A bijou boutique book of wry whimsy …'
{{infobox
|title= Simon Snootle and Other Small Stories
|author= Lorin Morgan-Richards
|reviewer= John Lloyd
|genre=Short Stories
|summary= A bijou boutique book of wry whimsy that could go further - although I fully expect its creator to do so.
|rating=3.5
|buy= Maybe
|borrow= Yes
|format= Hardback
|pages=68
|publisher= A Raven Above
|date= 2009
|isbn=978-0615270524
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0615270522</amazonuk>
|amazonus=<amazonus>0615270522</amazonus>
|sort=Simon Snootle and Other Small Stories
}}

I have never been in the market for hand-made, very limited bindings of books, so it was a surprise when the book reviewing gods offered this for me to review. Everything here has been done by the author - the binding, in veggie-friendly 'leather', the artwork, the decision to limit this to 250 copies (as it stands...) and more.

Inside these firm covers is a wee little item, containing seven wee little stories. They're of the gently absurd, wry, dark whimsy you come across now and again. So we find a boy who likes nothing better than to delve inside of, and nibble away at, school bus seats, to emulate the friend he has at home. Here's a bush with light fingers, as it were - stealing things from passers-by, and finding some form of comeuppance. Elsewhere, the melancholy will see dead birds, and a young man will live at the bottom of a cistern.

All well and good, if that's your choice, but the brevity of the stories do not allow for a great deal of growth. Yes, this is a blunt world, where we can be introduced to a man at the top of the page only for him to die by the foot. However I was seeking a little more - sometimes the dismissive endings were too abrupt for my personal taste.

There is of course the exception that proves the rule - the man and woman who meet despite being complete opposites have an unexpected conclusion together, which is certainly the best laugh of the book just because it is so blunt.

I liked the novelty of such a boutique book in my hands, although I wish someone had proofread the punctuation a little more closely. These ''small stories'' offer a glimpse of an author's world and his Edward Lear-styled pictures and absurdity, and hopefully are a stepping stone for him to produce something longer, and as a result more substantial. Either by his own hand or more conventionally...

I must thank the author for my review copy.

Other whimsical short stories can be found in [[Bears of England by Mick Jackson]], while [[The White Road by Tania Hershman]] reveals a mistress of the very concise and brief.

{{amazontext|amazon=0615270522}}

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