Geoff Nelder


Biography

Geoff Nelder is a freelance writer living in Chester, UK with his long-suffering wife and two occasional lodgers: his grown-up children whose sense and high intelligence persist in being a mystery to him.
He has had non-fiction books published on microclimates in the UK along with several articles in academic journals such as Weather, Geographical Magazine and the Times Educational Supplement. Geoff is a part-time journalist contributing humorous travel accounts to Cycling World.
He has had short stories accepted for publication by several ezines, small-press Crystal: the magazine for Writers and won a commendation for a story in the Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future Competition. He won first prize in the Café Doom short story competition in 2005.
Besides Escaping Reality he has completed another novel, Hot Air, which is also an adventure thriller, a Science Fiction block buster, and is progressing its sequel. Geoff is the leading scriptwriter for an experimental Internet TV sitcom.

Where to find Geoff Nelder online


Where to buy in print


Books

Hot Air    by Geoff Nelder
Price: $4.99 USD. 72890 words. Published by Brambling Books on May 26, 2011. Fiction.

A lethal hide-and-seek adventure in a hot air balloon over England and then the Mediterranean. Underlying the scary events is a criminal family whose specialism grew from money laundering to people laundering. Seeing suspicious men behind every olive tree and distrusting the police, feisty Erica uses the methodology of the villains against them in order to survive and seek justice.
Escaping Reality    by Geoff Nelder
Price: $1.99 USD. 94450 words. Published by Brambling Books on April 15, 2010. Fiction.

(5.00 from 1 review)
The squashed nose on a wet pavement, followed by a brutal yet comic internment lead our hero to a gut-wrenching escape. A dangerous winter trek across the Northumberland Moors, even with a shocking surprising amorous interlude to raise the temperature a little, helps our criminal to survive however he can in the backstreets of Cumbrian towns.

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