Books
A DREAM OF LOCKDOWN
David’s first novel, A DREAM OF LOCKDOWN, was published under the orrydian imprint in June 2022. The book is fiction, but in it David also talks about some of his music and how it was written.
The three interlinked stories in the novel explore the inner life of the creative artist. A composer struggles with the middle movement of his new piece; a painter wonders what her works are trying to say; a philosopher wants to understand why people only think through the filters of their own ideas. A DREAM OF LOCKDOWN is a comedy about chess, telling stories, distorting mirrors, cryptic puzzles, the songs of the Beatles and living through lockdown. “Life, what is it but a dream?”
The book, published by orrydian, is available from Amazon both as a printed edition and also for Kindle.
Reader reviews include:
UVNEY
One of the characters in A DREAM OF LOCKDOWN is Ebenezer DuLally Gasp UVNEY (the Gasp is silent, or nearly so) – a celebrated Man of Letters in his own right.
Little has been told of Uvney’s life, but orrydian, keen to make his work better known, commissioned the old man to provide a set of illuminating Introductions to several major classics in a series of new editions. So far Uvney has provided prefaces to the following books:
THE GHOST AT CRONE
An isolated stately home in the dead of winter… the circumstances could not be more ominous for the disturbing manifestations which beset Crone Castle, the ancestral seat of the Lords Broodfest.
Unhappy to play second fiddle to the likes of Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles Dickens, H G Wells and Arthur Conan Doyle, Uvney decided to write his own narrative based on the terrifying supernatural events at the country seat of Lord Broodfest. THE GHOST AT CRONE was published by orrydian in 2023 and, despite some critical disfavour (see below), has now established itself as a popular penny dreadful and modern classic.
We, the undersigned, wish to dissociate ourselves completely from the jejune and, frankly, insulting portrait of the noble state of ghosthood presented by Uvney in THE GHOST AT CRONE. The terrifying and tragic events at the Castle are worthy of a far finer author, and – indeed – of an authority who properly understands what it is to haunt. Yours etc,
The Canterville Ghost
Peter Quint
The Ghost of Banquo
The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come
The Headless Horseman
The Ghost in the Machine
Modern readers, however, seem to feel differently, according to the reviews on Amazon:
STOP PRESS
Readers will be happy to hear that Uvney has completed his new book and the manuscript is currently being prepared for publication.