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The memoirs of Bob McNeil, who is best remembered for his work as an intrepid reporter for TV3, New Zealand, where he worked for over 20 years until his retirement. He has won a number of awards for television journalism and traveled to enough countries to lose track of the number of passports he's filled up. For most of his career he told stories from around the country and the world, through the medium of television and radio. The nature of television means you can't just stay at home and do interviews over the phone, you have to pack your bags, pick up a bulky tripod and go to real places to meet real people. As a child Bob loved reading about adventures, but never dreamed the stories he would hear and tell in his lifetime would far outnumber those he had read about in small town New Zealand.But thanks to his TV3 career he has had a number of real adventures of his own, and now retired there, is time to tell some of the tales behind the stories. Bob has traveled to countless countries to report on issues as varied as disasters in the Pacific Islands, yacht races in Milan and aid projects in Africa. The images he sent back for the news were snapshots of things he saw in person, and often the stories of how he got the stories are just as colourful. From his childhood in Taranaki to his first overseas trip, to being shot at in Fiji and interviewing one of his heroes, Sir Edmund Hillary in Nepal, this book is a chronicle of the importance of stories and an ode to the characters who bring them to life.
A poetry anthology that candidly deals with adulthood.
Celebrated poet, essayist, and artist Bob McNeil explores love and loss in all its complexity, contradictions, and beauty, a journey made all the more urgent by the reality of his-and our own-mortality.
Book of Horrors III features seven chilling tales. I See Your Night and Raise You Hell by Charles Gramlich exploits the fear of clowns and strangers in bathroom stalls. Uxoricide by Bob McNeil mirrors one of the most popular murder trials in American history. The Night We Aired the House by Chris Campeau is an emotionally charged story of family loss and the living dead. Revenge of the Shape-Shifter by Rekha Ambardar incorporates Native American lore to tell a chilling story of revenge. A Hero's Welcome by Peter Indianna goes deep into the layers of insanity caused by PTSD. Snoflower by L.K. Scott tells of a loving couple with a dark sadistic secret. Lastly, Schrodinger's Dilemma by Dan Lee reflects on guilt and remorse. All together, the stories make for a satisfying collection of horror.
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