Catch Stranger Than Fulham Expressed By Matthew Baylis Presented As File

on Stranger Than Fulham

an attempt to escape his bizarre family and stagnation up North, tv soapaddict Alistair Strange moves to Fulham where he lands a job editing for a vanity publisher.
It is an odd kind of job, but he is used to oddness: his parents are strange, his elder brother is strange his name is strange.
. . The behaviour of his lovely but troubled flatmate Martha, however, is odder than anything that Alistair has encountered before.
Can he rescue Martha Can he find out what his family is hiding And is life better than tv Matthew Baylis also known as sitelink M.
H. Baylis and Matt Baylis was born in Nottingham in, and grew up in Southport, Merseyside, His chief literary influences were, he says, Coronation Street and National Geographic magazine, The soap opera gave him a love of stories, particularly stories about real people in very specific times and places.
National Geographic taught him to see the whole world, near and far, as an exotic
Catch Stranger Than Fulham Expressed By Matthew Baylis  Presented As File
tribe, His love of both has taken him to some interesting places: after a spell as a storyliner on EastEnders, he set up soap operas in Cambodia and Kenya, and spent time on the remote Pacific island of Tanna, Vanuatu.
He is also the only British scriptwriter ever to have had a film shown at the Pyongyang International Film F Matthew Baylis also known as sitelink M.
H. Baylis and Matt Baylis was born in Nottingham in, and grew up in Southport, Merseyside, His chief literary influences were, he says, Coronation Street and National Geographic magazine, The soap opera gave him a love of stories, particularly stories about real people in very specific times and places.
National Geographic taught him to see the whole world, near and far, as an exotic tribe, His love of both has taken him to some interesting places: after a spell as a storyliner on 'EastEnders', he set up soap operas in Cambodia and Kenya, and spent time on the remote Pacific island of Tanna, Vanuatu.
He is also the only British scriptwriter ever to have had a film shown at the Pyongyang International Film Festival.
He speaks Bislama pidgin badly, but not as badly as he speaks Romany, He writes a daily tv review column in the Daily Express, and he lives in Haringey, the London borough so beloved of his fictional hero, Rex Tracey.
He would quite like to have been a Dean Martin style club crooner, but really, his only great ambition was to write crime novels.
Which he does. His all time favourite authors are : Emanuel Litvinoff, Simon Brett, Evelyn Waugh and John le Carre, If he was stranded on a desert island, he'd require all the above, plus every episode of Hill Street Blues, Cagney and Lacey, Minder and Brookside on dvd.
sitelink.