Skip to content
  • Who is Gulliver Smith?
    • Previous posts
  • Previous posts

Gulliver Smith

Random snippets from long ago

Tag: fiction

Posted on May 4, 2025May 4, 2025

Banged Up

Posted on May 2, 2025

A Random Thought at Three in the Morning.

Posted on May 2, 2025

A walk on a Winter’s Day.

Posted on May 1, 2025May 1, 2025

The Command Structure

Posted on May 1, 2025

Be a good girl and you won’t get hurt

Posted on April 29, 2025

Look on my works, ye mighty and despair

Posted on April 29, 2025

The Girl and the Kitten.

Posted on April 28, 2025April 28, 2025

I can write in the ‘romance’ genre. How hard can it be?

Posted on April 26, 2025April 28, 2025

Editing, every writers’ curse.

Posts pagination

Previous page Page 1 … Page 3 Page 4

Menu

  • Who is Gulliver Smith?
    • Previous posts
  • Previous posts
About Gulliver

Gulliver Smith used to be someone completely different - this is a massive step down. Gulliver has been known by other names for many years. He was younger then, clever, hirsute, handsome, good company, sensible and superbly fit. None of the above apply now.

He writes crime fiction with a hard edge, making use of a life which frequently brought him into contact with major drug dealers, gang leaders, heroin addicts and many other denizens of society's underbelly. Many of them were fascinating company and regarded him as a friend, albeit a one-sided friendship doomed to be short-lived.

During the course of an unconventional life, touched by wanderlust, involving much movement around the globe, he has been a labourer in a steel-works, taught English and History, been a work-study engineer, a restaurateur, civil servant, Nightclub bouncer, antique dealer, owned a small French vineyard and also had another job that he's not supposed to talk about.

His first published novel was a Kindle phenomenon, storming into the Top Ten of the Amazon All Books chart. As with so much else in his life, Gulliver managed to contain astonishment behind a façade of justifiable expectation.

To define the author in one word would be difficult. "Wastrel" comes pretty close.

He writes, sporadically. Very occasionally, his writing meets acceptable standards.”

Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Gulliver Smith
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Gulliver Smith
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar