News
Bognor Boy – review
There has been a review with a photo in the Bognor Regis Post. Kevin Smith writes: 'Halycon days in Bognor Regis have been captured in a new book by an...
Bognor Boy: How I Became an Anarchist
This book is now available, published by Zena and distributed by Central Books. It is 277 pages long, in paperback and priced £10.ISBN 978-0-9511069-7-6 As its back...
Governor’s Beans – another poem published in International Times
'Governor's Beans': this poem has just been published in the International Times. See link: http://internationaltimes.it/beans/
Bognor Boy: How I Became an Anarchist – Advance Information Sheet
Peter Marshall’s compelling journey takes us from the sunny beaches of Bognor, around the world and back to England, during which time he develops a vision of radical...
Bognor Boy
Another recommendation for the new book: ‘“I wanted my life to be an open field of unexpected opportunities, not a closed future,” Peter Marshall writes in his...
New Poem Published in International Times
One of my poems called 'Modern Culture' was published at the end of July in International Times. See link: http://internationaltimes.it/modern-culture/
Bognor Boy: How I Became an Anarchist – recommendation
Another very good recommendation: Peter Marshall found a silver lining in growing up in a philistine, one-parent, middle-class family that exiled him to boarding...
Bognor Boy: How I Became an Anarchist – recommendation
Another great recommendation: ‘Peter Marshall is a rare soul: writer, philosopher, poet, sailor, and a man with an unusually developed social conscience defined by his...
Two poems to be published in the International Times
I have two poems to be published in the International Times . They are a version of 'Beans' and 'Modern Culture'. See in 'Works in Progress' section under 'Poems'.
Peter Marshall’s impressive history is a well-argued and absorbing account of astrology’s grip on the imagination, and an eloquent defence of its importance in our lives … fascinating
Gary Lachman, The Guardian
Reading about anarchism is stimulating and funny and sad. What more can you ask of a book?