Archive | eBooks

Fault Lines – an eBook to help save lives

Fault Lines is an eBook that was created to raise money for the Red Cross’s relief efforts in Japan and New Zealand. It was ‘curated’ by Matt Granfield in just over a week and I’m honoured that my contribution, The Cherry Tree, opens the anthology. The book is a collection of new, never-before published writing  Read more »

Vroom with a View eBook out now!

The eBook version of my journey from Milan to Rome on a ’61 Vespa is now available on Amazon worldwide. It’s currently only available as a Kindle book, but with the vast range of free reading apps that Amazon offer you’ll be able to read it on any device you own. To download your version  Read more »

Swahili for the Broken-Hearted eBook out now!

The eBook version of my journey from Cape Town to Cairo is now available on Amazon worldwide. It’s currently only available as a Kindle book, but with the vast range of free reading apps that Amazon offer you’ll be able to read it on any device you own. To download your version simply follow the  Read more »

The Wrong Way Home eBook out now!

The eBook version of my journey from London to Sydney is now available on Amazon worldwide. It’s currently only available as a Kindle book, but with the vast range of free reading apps that Amazon offer you’ll be able to read it on any device you own. To download your version simply follow the links  Read more »

Out by Christmas

… e-versions of all my books. That’s the deadline I’m working to, on the assumption that a lot of you will be getting shiny new iPads and e-Readers from Santa this year. Covers are being created. Code is being coded. And e-commerce solutions are being tested so that come that one day in December you’ll  Read more »

My Kindle. One week on.

A week ago a brand new Kindle 3 landed on my doorstep. Quite literally. The delivery guy from Royal Mail chucked it on the doorstep, knocked on the door and then ran away. I opened the box and it hasn’t been away from my side every since. The first thing that impressed me was the  Read more »