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Griff Rhys Jones

    Griff Rhys Jones è un comico, scrittore e attore gallese che ha ottenuto notorietà negli anni '80 attraverso programmi televisivi di sketch. Ha co-fondato la casa di produzione Talkback Productions e ha sviluppato una carriera come presentatore televisivo e autore. Il suo stile comico presenta spesso umorismo osservazionale e giochi di parole, che riflettono il suo background in storia e letteratura. Jones scrive anche libri, traendo spesso ispirazione dai suoi viaggi ed esperienze personali, ed è un convinto sostenitore della conservazione architettonica.

    Semi-detached
    To the Baltic with Bob
    The Nation's Favourite Comic Poems
    The nation's favourite poems
    Rivers
    • Rivers

      • 288pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Griff Rhys Jones, one of Britain's favourite travel presenters, explores the extraordinary rivers of Britain.

      Rivers
    • This wonderful anthology contains some of the nation's all-time favourite comic poetry. From much-loved classics such as Lewis Carroll's curious 'Jabberwocky' to lesser known and forgotten gems such as Gelett Burgess's 'The Purple Cow', Griff Rhys Jones takes us on a poetic tour of witty, nonsensical and plain laugh-out-loud funny poems. The selection brings together poets from every age and every walk of life, from Shakespeare to Victoria Wood and from Keats to Benjamin Zephaniah. There is Roald Dahl's cunning variation on 'Little Red Riding Hood', Spike Milligan's brilliantly ridiculous 'On the Ning Nang Nong' as well as several entries from the ever-elusive Anon, including one delightfully succint 'Peas'. Remembered, half-remembered, cherished or written on a tea towel, here are some of the nation's favourite comic poems.

      The Nation's Favourite Comic Poems
    • To the Baltic with Bob

      • 403pagine
      • 15 ore di lettura

      In the summer of 2002, two profoundly amateur sailors, Griff and Bob, set off in an elderly yacht for Russia, because, on the map, it looked easier than sailing to Cornwall. They took Baines with them, as he knew how to mend the engine. And this is their story. Over four long months of applied bickering in a vessel no bigger than a London taxi, they visited most of the geographically interesting restaurants on the Baltic seaboard. They sailed, over, and, even at one point, onto the mysterious heart of the Nordic world. They pushed themselves to the very limits of human endurance, before finally agreeing to wash their sleeping bags on a cool cycle at number six. To the Baltic with Bob is the full account of their stirring journey through the longest heat wave the frozen north has ever suffered; of three men in search of the answer to a troubling can you really outmanoeuvre a mid-life crisis by running away to sea?

      To the Baltic with Bob
    • In Semi-detached Griff Rhys Jones recreates his suburban childhood and adolescence in precise and evocative detail; every young trauma, embarrassment and joyous rebellion, hazily-remembered summer afternoons realised into the wild of the woods and forming feral gangs. He relives the freezing bus journeys to school and the impulsive stealing of half-a-crown from Charlie Hume's money box; holidays in the dreary exile of Weston-Super-Mare or outside Butlins at Clacton, longing to be in - images that are fixed in his consciousness, utterly fuzzy at the edges like a Mivvi but even more concentrated at the centre, frozen into a gooey sweet jam of pure recollected emotion. A confident middle child, Griff adored his mother Gwen and father Elwyn - a shy doctor and woodwork fanatic who loathed the tedium of English social ritual but had a penchant for sweeties and ice-cream and was constantly battling with his weight.

      Semi-detached