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  • Graffiti scrawled on the exteriour of Barts Hospital, by fans of the popular TV show Sherlock starring Benedict Cumberbatch where the fictional character was filmed, seemingly jumping to his death, on 5th March 2017, at Smithfield, in the City of London, England.
    sherlock_graffiti-02-05-03-2017.jpg
  • Graffiti scrawled on the exteriour of Barts Hospital, by fans of the popular TV show Sherlock starring Benedict Cumberbatch where the fictional character was filmed, seemingly jumping to his death, on 5th March 2017, at Smithfield, in the City of London, England.
    sherlock_graffiti-01-05-03-2017.jpg
  • Contractors carry a publicity board for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-14-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-08-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-07-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-16-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-12-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-09-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-04-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-01-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Sheriff Woody Pride, aka Woody, the cowboy character from the Pixar/Disney CGI fantasy film Toy Story, lies forgotten outside a south London charity shop.
    toystory_woody04-02-12-2014.jpg
  • Sheriff Woody Pride, aka Woody, the cowboy character from the Pixar/Disney CGI fantasy film Toy Story, lies forgotten outside a south London charity shop.
    toystory_woody05-02-12-2014.jpg
  • Plastic toy characters represent owners of the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, East Sussex, England.
    buddhist_retreat83-27-06-2010.jpg
  • Contractors carry a publicity board for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-13-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-11-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-10-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-06-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Passers-by walk past a publicity banner for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-03-13-11-2018.jpg
  • Plastic toy characters representing the community at the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, East Sussex, England.
    buddhist_retreat74-27-06-2010.jpg
  • Contractors carry a publicity board for the new film 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald', hours before its UK premier in Leicester Square, on 13th November 2018, in London, England.
    grindelwald_premier-15-13-11-2018.jpg
  • A memorial has been placed where a fictitious TV character called Victor Meldrew was filmed being killed at Shawford Station, Hants, England, UK. If we drove past where someone's life ended, the victim would just be an anonymous statistic but flowers are left to die too and touching poems and dedications are written by family and loved-ones. One reads: "We don't want to win a million, we want Victor back!" From a project about makeshift shrines: ?Britons have long installed memorials in the landscape: Statues and monuments to war heroes, Princesses and the socially privileged. But nowadays we lay wreaths to those who die suddenly - ordinary folk killed as pedestrians, as drivers or by alcohol, all celebrated on our roadsides and in cities with simple, haunting roadside remberences.
    memorials005-21-11_2000.jpg
  • Environmental activists read copies of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-08-18-10-2019.jpg
  • Environmental activists read copies of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-02-18-10-2019.jpg
  • Environmental activists read copies of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-03-18-10-2019.jpg
  • Environmental activists read copies of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-09-18-10-2019.jpg
  • Environmental activists read copies of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-06-18-10-2019.jpg
  • An environmental activist reads a copy of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-01-18-10-2019.jpg
  • Environmental activists read copies of a fake newspaper with fictional headlines about the effects of global Climate Change during an occupation of Oxford Circus in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 18th October 2019, in London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-07-18-10-2019.jpg
  • A portrait of Science-fiction writer Arthur C Clarke in the summer of 1992, at his home in Minehead, England. Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, CBE, FRAS (1917– 2008) was a British science fiction writer, science writer and futurist, inventor, undersea explorer, and television series host. He is perhaps most famous for being co-writer of the screenplay for the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, widely considered to be one of the most influential films of all time.
    arthur_c_clarke-01-06-1992_1.jpg
  • A portrait of Science-fiction writer Arthur C Clarke in the summer of 1992, at his home in Minehead, England. Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, CBE, FRAS (1917– 2008) was a British science fiction writer, science writer and futurist, inventor, undersea explorer, and television series host. He is perhaps most famous for being co-writer of the screenplay for the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, widely considered to be one of the most influential films of all time.
    arthur_c_clarke-01-06-1992.jpg
  • The many covers of childrens' illustrated fiction books displayed on the ground in a Brighton side-street market stall.
    childrens_books01-01-05-2010.jpg
  • A night view of the green Yorkshire Moors countryside looking down from a nearby hill to the top secret intelligence-gathering base of RAF Menwith Hill, near Harrogate, Yorkshire, England. One sees the lights of passing traffic past  surreal-looking white radomes in the shape of golf balls - each containing a satellite dish - that are dotted across the science-fiction landscape. Many of these are used for signals interception from communications satellites and are commonly thought to be part of ECHELON, a highly secretive world-wide signals intelligence and analysis network. Other parts of this notorious  site are thought to be used by the Space Based Infrared System employed by the US National Missile Defence program. The base has attracted significant levels of protest from anti-nuclear and pacifist groups.
    RB_107-18-05-2001.jpg
  • A view of the green Yorkshire moors countryside looking down from a nearby hill to the top secret intelligence-gathering base of RAF Menwith Hill, near Harrogate, Yorkshire, England. One sees the surreal-looking white radomes in the shape of golf balls - each containing a satellite dish - that are dotted across the science-fiction landscape. Many of these are used for signals interception from communications satellites and are commonly thought to be part of ECHELON, a highly secretive world-wide signals intelligence and analysis network. Other parts of this notorious  site are thought to be used by the Space Based Infrared System employed by the US National Missile Defence program. The base has attracted significant levels of protest from anti-nuclear and pacifist groups.
    RB-0062.jpg
  • Surrounded by books, a young 12 year-old girl browses intensely Art books in Borders bookshop in Central London, England.
    ella_borders_bookshop01-29-08-2007.jpg
  • WH Smiths true crime and horror literature on sale in departures shopping area of Heathrow airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport937-10-08-2009.jpg
  • WH Smiths true crime and horror literature on sale in departures shopping area of Heathrow airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport939-10-08-2009.jpg
  • Surrounded by books, a young 12 year-old girl browses intensely Art books in Borders bookshop in Central London, England.
    ella_borders_bookshop02-29-08-2007.jpg
  • A reader looks through books in the Linen Hall Library in Belfast City Centre, Northern Ireland.
    linen_library01-26-09-1996.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a deflated childrens' inflatable bouncy castle, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-144-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a deflated childrens' inflatable bouncy castle, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-142-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a childrens' merry-go-round carousel, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-139-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a deflated childrens' inflatable bouncy castle, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-140-18-09-2019.jpg
  • Elaborate wall art in Curtain Street, Shoreditch, East London.
    shoreditch_art04-08-10-2013.jpg
  • Visitors inspect the row of childrens' graves in the churchyard of St James, Cooling, Kent. Charles Dickens wrote about these graves in the opening of his famous novel Great Expectations. Dickens lived nearby in Higham and referred to this row of children's tombstones now inevitably referred to as Pip's graves. Dickens pictures them as '....five little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long which were arranged in a neat row ... and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine....' In fact the Cooling graves belong to the children of two families, aged between 1 month and about a year and a half, who died in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
    cooling_church04-02-06-2013.jpg
  • An engineer polishes a Thomas the Tank Engine locomotive whilst in sidings on the Bluebell Railway at Kingscote, England. The Bluebell Railway is a heritage line running for nine miles along the border between East and West Sussex, England. Steam trains are operated between Sheffield Park and Kingscote, with an intermediate station at Horsted Keynes. The railway is managed and run largely by volunteers. It has the largest collection (over 30) of steam locomotives in the UK, the first preserved standard gauge steam-operated passenger railway in the world to operate a public service, running its first train on 7 August 1960.
    thomas_tank-12-07-1999.jpg
  • The faces of theatre-goers mix with the actors at the entrance of the Vaudeville in London's Strand where Arthur Miller's Broken Glass is playing. The actors' faces of the production's starring roles  are seen in their characters during the Miller's play. Bob Hiskins, Tara FitzGerald and Antony Sher all share the limelight in this story focusing on a couple in New York City in 1938, the same time of Kristallnacht, in Nazi Germany. The play's title is derived from Kristallnacht, which is also known as the Night of Broken Glass.
    theatre_faces1-21-09-2011.jpg
  • Detail close-up of a terracotta face hanging on a house brick wall.
    terracotta_face3-27-May-2011.jpg
  • RAF Fylingdales is a British Royal Air Force station high on Snod Hill in the North York Moors, England. Before their demolition by Ministry of Defence contractors this early attack warning Cold War facility, consisted of three 40-metre-diameter 'golfballs' or geodesic domes (radomes) containing mechanically steered radar. They became a local tourist attraction and coach tours drove past the site listening to the interference on radios emitted by the radomes. They have since been replaced by the current tetrahedron ('pyramid') structure and is still a secret location. Its Motto is "Vigilamus" ("We are watching"). It is now a radar base and part of the United States-controlled Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS)...
    RB_104-05-05-1994.jpg
  • On a plyboard hoarding that has sealed up a Restaurant in Leicester Square, some graffiti suggests that the Coronavirus pandemic is a conspiracy reminiscent of George Orwell's cult dystopian work, '1984', on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England.
    closed_pub01-29-09-2020.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a childrens' merry-go-round carousel and inflatable bouncy castle, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-145-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a childrens' merry-go-round carousel, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-146-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a deflated childrens' inflatable bouncy castle, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-143-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a deflated childrens' inflatable bouncy castle, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-141-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A detail of a child's deflated 'Thomas The Tank Engine' Anagram balloon that has landed, making it hazardous to wildlife, on marshland near Two Tree Island, at Leigh creek in Old Leigh, on 10th September 2019, in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, England.
    estuary_walk-21-10-09-2019.jpg
  • A detail of a child's deflated 'Thomas The Tank Engine' Anagram balloon that has landed, making it hazardous to wildlife, on marshland near Two Tree Island, at Leigh creek in Old Leigh, on 10th September 2019, in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, England.
    estuary_walk-20-10-09-2019.jpg
  • Elaborate wall art in Curtain Street, Shoreditch, East London.
    shoreditch_art05-08-10-2013.jpg
  • Elaborate wall art in Curtain Street, Shoreditch, East London.
    shoreditch_art01-08-10-2013.jpg
  • Visitors inspect the row of childrens' graves in the churchyard of St James, Cooling, Kent. Charles Dickens wrote about these graves in the opening of his famous novel Great Expectations. Dickens lived nearby in Higham and referred to this row of children's tombstones now inevitably referred to as Pip's graves. Dickens pictures them as '....five little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long which were arranged in a neat row ... and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine....' In fact the Cooling graves belong to the children of two families, aged between 1 month and about a year and a half, who died in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
    cooling_church02-02-06-2013.jpg
  • Visitors inspect the row of childrens' graves in the churchyard of St James, Cooling, Kent. Charles Dickens wrote about these graves in the opening of his famous novel Great Expectations. Dickens lived nearby in Higham and referred to this row of children's tombstones now inevitably referred to as Pip's graves. Dickens pictures them as '....five little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long which were arranged in a neat row ... and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine....' In fact the Cooling graves belong to the children of two families, aged between 1 month and about a year and a half, who died in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
    cooling_church01-02-06-2013.jpg
  • The faces of theatre-goers mix with the actors at the entrance of the Vaudeville in London's Strand where Arthur Miller's Broken Glass is playing. The actors' faces of the production's starring roles  are seen in their characters during the Miller's play. Bob Hiskins, Tara FitzGerald and Antony Sher all share the limelight in this story focusing on a couple in New York City in 1938, the same time of Kristallnacht, in Nazi Germany. The play's title is derived from Kristallnacht, which is also known as the Night of Broken Glass.
    theatre_faces3-21-09-2011.jpg
  • RAF Fylingdales is a British Royal Air Force station high on Snod Hill in the North York Moors, England. Before their demolition by Ministry of Defence contractors this early attack warning Cold War facility, consisted of three 40-metre-diameter 'golfballs' or geodesic domes (radomes) containing mechanically steered radar. They became a local tourist attraction and coach tours drove past the site listening to the interference on radios emitted by the radomes. They have since been replaced by the current tetrahedron ('pyramid') structure and is still a secret location. Its Motto is "Vigilamus" ("We are watching"). It is now a radar base and part of the United States-controlled Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS)...
    RB_105-05-05-1994.jpg
  • Able-bodied sailor relaxes in his Junior Rating bunk aboard HMS Vigilant, a Vanguard class nuclear submarine
    5105-RPB59-faslane018-26-09-2007.jpg
  • The tattooed hermit, Tom Leppard (1935-2016) at his secret island hideaway on the Isle of Skye, Scotland in 2007. <br />
<br />
(See main gallery caption).
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man259-27-09-2007.jpg
  • A landscape of a Polish version of Disneyland that features a childrens' merry-go-round carousel, on 18th September 2019, near the Wielka Krokiew ski jump, Zakopane, Malopolska, Poland.
    poland-147-18-09-2019.jpg
  • A message written by someboy, on a sign in a north Somerset forest.
    wrington_walk07-26-10-2015.jpg
  • Virgin boss, Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Galactic directors Will Whitehorn and Stephen Attenborough, talk to the media during the unveiling of their SpaceShipTwo concept model's unveiling at the New York Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center.  Now under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like a Stanley Kubrick movie set from '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than the future for everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starts in around 2009.  .Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness..Launched in September 2004 by Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Galactic will invest up to $250 million to develop the world's first commercial space tourism business with the building, testing and flying of five space shipShipTwos and two mother ships.  It is expected that within the first full year of commercial operations Virgin Galactic will enable 500 people to fulfil their dreams of becoming astronauts; in the last 4 decades the world has seen fewer than 500 astronauts. Flights start around 2009..28/09/2006
    baker_virgin11.jpg
  • Pixar movie Finding Nemo Clownfishes printed on to tourist towels in a shop side street window in Male, Maldives.
    maldives401-15-11-2007.jpg
  • Detail of a shop window selling seaside holiday trinkets including different sizes of Golliwogs, on 14th July 2017, at Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. The golliwog is a black fictional character from the late 19th century depicting a rag doll. It was reproduced by commercial and hobby toy-makers as a children's toy and had great popularity in the UK and Australia into the 1970s. The doll has black skin, eyes rimmed in white, clown lips and frizzy hair and was seen, along with the teddy bear, as a suitable soft toy for a young boy. The image of the doll has become the subject of controversy as the Golliwog has been seen as a depiction of black people, accused along with pickaninnies, minstrels, mammy figures, and other caricatures as being racist. The golliwog has been described as "the least known of the major anti-Black caricatures in the United States.
    scarborough-08-14-07-2017.jpg
  • A special effects model maker artist works on a clay head of actor Pierce Brosnan in his role as James Bond in the 1996 film GoldenEye, filmed at an old Rolls-Royce factory at the Leavesden Aerodrome in Hertfordshire. Using publicity and studio head shots of Brosnan, the woman refers to the glossy prints to sculpt the contours and shape for a scene requiring a miniature version of 007. GoldenEye (1995) is the seventeenth spy film in the James Bond series, and the first to star Pierce Brosnan as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond. The film was directed by Martin Campbell and is the first film in the series not to take story elements from the works of novelist Ian Fleming.
    bond_modeller-12-03-1995.jpg
  • Two women walk past the large features of a head in Southwark, south London. The face is an urban wall painting by the German artist ECB depicting a fictional character's giant face hosted by the SOON Gallery. ECB specialises in huge monochrome mural portraits of anonymous strangers secretly sketched in public places. Scaled up yet remaining unknown, the person's image is 'a tribute anyone and no-one .. asking uncompromising questions about the nature of recognition and status ..'
    street_art02-23-02-2012.jpg
  • Detail of a shop window selling seaside holiday trinkets including different sizes of Golliwogs, on 14th July 2017, at Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. The golliwog is a black fictional character from the late 19th century depicting a rag doll. It was reproduced by commercial and hobby toy-makers as a children's toy and had great popularity in the UK and Australia into the 1970s. The doll has black skin, eyes rimmed in white, clown lips and frizzy hair and was seen, along with the teddy bear, as a suitable soft toy for a young boy. The image of the doll has become the subject of controversy as the Golliwog has been seen as a depiction of black people, accused along with pickaninnies, minstrels, mammy figures, and other caricatures as being racist. The golliwog has been described as "the least known of the major anti-Black caricatures in the United States.
    scarborough-07-14-07-2017.jpg
  • Detail of a shop window selling seaside holiday trinkets including different sizes of Golliwogs, on 14th July 2017, at Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. The golliwog is a black fictional character from the late 19th century depicting a rag doll. It was reproduced by commercial and hobby toy-makers as a children's toy and had great popularity in the UK and Australia into the 1970s. The doll has black skin, eyes rimmed in white, clown lips and frizzy hair and was seen, along with the teddy bear, as a suitable soft toy for a young boy. The image of the doll has become the subject of controversy as the Golliwog has been seen as a depiction of black people, accused along with pickaninnies, minstrels, mammy figures, and other caricatures as being racist. The golliwog has been described as "the least known of the major anti-Black caricatures in the United States.
    scarborough-09-14-07-2017.jpg
  • Greek-born writer of fiction, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. ..Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. His latest novel is The Convent (2010).
    panos_karnezis07-18-06-2003.jpg
  • Greek-born writer of fiction, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. ..Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. His latest novel is The Convent (2010).
    panos_karnezis08-18-06-2003.jpg
  • A formal portrait of English journalist David Thomas, after his appointment as the new editor of Punch Magazine, in February 1989, London England. Thomas was Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 24, became a magazine editor at 25 and was the youngest editor in the 150-year history of Punch magazine at 29. Since 1992 he has worked as a freelance author and journalist. He now writes fiction under his own name and as Tom Cain and, as of February 2015, David Churchill.
    david_thomas01-01-06-1989.jpg
  • A portrait of English cartoonist, Glen Baxter whose surrealist, absurdist drawings are exhibited in the Eagle on 12th June 1994 in Clerkenwell, London, England. Born in Leeds in 1944, Baxter was trained at the Leeds College of Art. His images, and their corresponding captions, fuse art and language inspired by pulp fiction and adventure comics with intellectual jokes and references. Baxter's art has been collected in numerous books, and his work has appeared in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and The Independent on Sunday. His simple line-drawings often feature cowboys, gangsters, explorers, and schoolchildren, who utter incongruous intellectual statements regarding art and philosophy.
    glen_baxter02-12-06-1994.jpg
  • A portrait of English poet, lecturer, actor and broadcaster Patrick J. Kavanagh. We see his face as a close-up while at home in the Cotswolds, Gloucestershire, England. P J Kavanagh (born 6 January 1931) is the author of eight books of poems, an essayist and travel-writer, a novelist, and editor of the poems of Ivor Gurney; he has received the Cholmondely Award for Poetry, the Guardian Fiction Prize, and the Richard Hillary Prize for his memoir The Perfect Stranger. In addition to this literary career, he has been an actor, lecturer, journalist and broadcaster, all after serving in the Army during the Korean War, where he was wounded in action.
    PJ_kavanagh03-20-02-1990.jpg
  • A portrait of English poet, lecturer, actor and broadcaster Patrick J. Kavanagh. We see him in miffle-distance seated in his favourite armchair while at home in the Cotswolds, Gloucestershire, England. P J Kavanagh (born 6 January 1931) is the author of eight books of poems, an essayist and travel-writer, a novelist, and editor of the poems of Ivor Gurney; he has received the Cholmondely Award for Poetry, the Guardian Fiction Prize, and the Richard Hillary Prize for his memoir The Perfect Stranger. In addition to this literary career, he has been an actor, lecturer, journalist and broadcaster, all after serving in the Army during the Korean War, where he was wounded in action.
    PJ_kavanagh02-20-02-1990.jpg
  • A portrait of English poet, lecturer, actor and broadcaster Patrick J. Kavanagh. We see him reaching to hold a beam outside his home in the Cotswolds, Gloucestershire, England. P J Kavanagh (born 6 January 1931) is the author of eight books of poems, an essayist and travel-writer, a novelist, and editor of the poems of Ivor Gurney; he has received the Cholmondely Award for Poetry, the Guardian Fiction Prize, and the Richard Hillary Prize for his memoir The Perfect Stranger. In addition to this literary career, he has been an actor, lecturer, journalist and broadcaster, all after serving in the Army during the Korean War, where he was wounded in action.
    PJ_kavanagh01-20-02-1990.jpg
  • Glen Baxter, nicknamed "Colonel Baxter," is an English cartoonist, noted for his surrealist, absurdist drawings. He is seen in a portrait situation before the opening of an exhibition of his work at the the Eagle in Clerkenwell, London. Born in Leeds in 1944, Baxter was trained at the Leeds College of Art. His images, and their corresponding captions, fuse art and language inspired by pulp fiction and adventure comics with intellectual jokes and references. Baxter's art has been collected in numerous books, and his work has appeared in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and The Independent on Sunday. His simple line-drawings often feature cowboys, gangsters, explorers, and schoolchildren, who utter incongruous intellectual statements regarding art and philosophy.
    glen_baxter-12-06-1994.jpg
  • As afternoon light fades, we see an incongruous landscape of false forest trees amid an industrial airport lot. A supporting pillar from the hotel chain, Sofitel, a 605 bedroom, 27 suite and 45 meeting room accommodation and business hub, is situated at the Heathrow Airport 's Terminal 5 hotel. The woodland screen is hiding a wasteland of undeveloped land that may soon be another airport hotel but at the moment, it makes for a strange rural/urban scene where the viewer is not sure where reality stops and fiction takes over. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport862-22-07-2009.jpg
  • A formal portrait of English journalist David Thomas, after his appointment as the new editor of Punch Magazine, in February 1989, London England. Thomas was Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 24, became a magazine editor at 25 and was the youngest editor in the 150-year history of Punch magazine at 29. Since 1992 he has worked as a freelance author and journalist. He now writes fiction under his own name and as Tom Cain and, as of February 2015, David Churchill.
    david_thomas02-01-06-1989.jpg
  • Sri Lankan-born Canadian Novelist Michael Ondaatje holds up a copy of his book 'The English Patient' on the night he shared the Booker Prize for literature with Barry Unsworth's Sacred Hunger, on 1/10/1992 in London, England. The Man Booker Prize for Fiction is a literary prize awarded each year for the best original novel, written in the English language and published in the UK.
    michael_ondaatje-01-10-1992.jpg
  • A Bench depicting a scene from The Wind in the Wiillows by Kenneth Graham with the Bank of England and the WW1 memorial at Cornhill, City of London. Scottish-born Graham (1859-1932) was a city worker at the Bank of England, retiring as its Secretary in 1908 due to ill health, before writing one of the most loved pieces of English fiction about Thames river bank wildlife characters. BookBench is part of a trail of 50 uniquely designed benches around London, connecting literary locations. The benches will be auctioned off to raise funds for the National Literacy Trust, helping to raise literacy levels in the UK.
    city_people03-05-08-2014.jpg
  • A portrait of English cartoonist, Glen Baxter whose surrealist, absurdist drawings are exhibited in the Eagle on 12th June 1994 in Clerkenwell, London, England. Born in Leeds in 1944, Baxter was trained at the Leeds College of Art. His images, and their corresponding captions, fuse art and language inspired by pulp fiction and adventure comics with intellectual jokes and references. Baxter's art has been collected in numerous books, and his work has appeared in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and The Independent on Sunday. His simple line-drawings often feature cowboys, gangsters, explorers, and schoolchildren, who utter incongruous intellectual statements regarding art and philosophy.
    glen_baxter01-12-06-1994.jpg
  • A Bench depicting a scene from The Wind in the Wiillows by Kenneth Graham with the Bank of England and the WW1 memorial at Cornhill, City of London. Scottish-born Graham (1859-1932) was a city worker at the Bank of England, retiring as its Secretary in 1908 due to ill health, before writing one of the most loved pieces of English fiction about Thames river bank wildlife characters. BookBench is part of a trail of 50 uniquely designed benches around London, connecting literary locations. The benches will be auctioned off to raise funds for the National Literacy Trust, helping to raise literacy levels in the UK.
    city_people02-05-08-2014.jpg
  • Writer, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. Short stories by Panos Karnezis have been broadcast by BBC Radio 4 and have appeared in Granta, New Writing 11, Prospect, and Areté.
    Panos Karnezis13 RBA.jpg
  • Writer, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. Short stories by Panos Karnezis have been broadcast by BBC Radio 4 and have appeared in Granta, New Writing 11, Prospect, and Areté.
    Panos Karnezis11 RBA.jpg
  • Writer, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. Short stories by Panos Karnezis have been broadcast by BBC Radio 4 and have appeared in Granta, New Writing 11, Prospect, and Areté.
    Panos Karnezis12 RBA.jpg
  • Writer, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. Short stories by Panos Karnezis have been broadcast by BBC Radio 4 and have appeared in Granta, New Writing 11, Prospect, and Areté.
    Panos Karnezis06 RBA.jpg
  • Writer, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. Short stories by Panos Karnezis have been broadcast by BBC Radio 4 and have appeared in Granta, New Writing 11, Prospect, and Areté.
    Panos Karnezis03 RBA.jpg
  • Writer, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Author of The Maze he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. His first book, Little Infamies (2002) is a collection of connected short stories set in one nameless Greek village, and his second book, The Maze (2004), is a novel set in Anatolia in 1922. It was shortlisted for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award. Short stories by Panos Karnezis have been broadcast by BBC Radio 4 and have appeared in Granta, New Writing 11, Prospect, and Areté. .
    Panos Karnezis02 RBA.jpg
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