Bizarre, brilliant, and unlike anything youve ever read. Ian Sansom, The Telegraph
'The novelist and critic Nicholas Royle has a new book out, which is as good and as strange as its title suggests, David Bowie, Enid Blyton and the Sun Machine, in which he describes some of the ways literature functions as a delivery system for startling encounters for the purposes of the meeting of other minds, and of being gathered into a common social life ą la Bowie in his early song Memory of a Free Festival.' Ian Sansom, TLS
'one-of-a-kind fantasia.' Alexander Larman, The Spectator
A dazzling act of literary-critical rebellion, a portrait of pandemic family life and an intimate exploration of personal history. This book illuminates the recent cultural past, casting new light on the lives of David Bowie and Enid Blyton, and infuses the future with the brightness of its invention and wit. Naomi Booth, author of Exit Management
'This is IT: the book you couldnt possibly have been waiting for. Enid Blyton and a telepathic dog called Timmy take a bow for Bowie, who nods at COVID in a disturbing Toyland called Earth. A magical series of ghostly lectures from beyond the graves of academe, all served with lashings of lingering veer. Once again, Royle has rung my bell.' Timothy Morton, author of The Stuff of Life
'A fascinating mix of the autobiographical and the scholarly, woven deftly around two of the major cultural figures of recent times: Enid Blyton and David Bowie. Nicholas Royle mixes family and cultural histories in typically insightful and learned fashion.' Andrew Maunder, author of Enid Blyton: A Literary Life
David Bowie, Enid Blyton and the sun machine is about how literature and music burrows tunnels through our lives, connecting worlds of imagination and memory, connecting us to each other, creating new spaces for light to enter. Royles heartfelt and mischievous text assembles narratives, images, sounds, lyrics, childrens books and real and imagined memories into a luminous construction. Fragile and abundant, indulgent and generous, it is about how the peculiar goings-on in a Famous Five book or a stray line from a David Bowie song can change the way you see the world. Leah Kardos, author of Blackstar Theory: The Last Works of David Bowie
This is a fascinating book. Harassed academics will immediately relate to it, and so will all Enid Blyton and David Bowie fans, but it is much more than a book about any of those topics. It is an evocation of a time and a place, South London in the mid-twentieth century, the world that produced two such disparate figures as Blyton and Bowie, but also the author himself. I read it with great pleasure and interest. Gabriel Josipovici, author of Forgetting
'Hugely pleasurable. An adventure in life-writing and a highly original celebration of the life-forces of art and song. Alison Light, author of A Radical Romance
The books appeal and strength is the very unusual melding of Royles own story, Enid Blyton, Beckenham, David Bowie (including "Memory of a Free Festival"), which all coalesce by pivoting time and geography. Stephen Finer, painter
David Bowie, Enid Blyton and the sun machine is written with a poet's playful ear and a sometimes fierce polemical rage. Nicholas Royle's book has moments that will make you gasp with wonder. Turns of thought, passion and story feel as if they come from a master film director or a virtuoso storyteller. Linking Blyton with Bowie in ways we never dreamt imaginable, Royle illumines the solar wonder of both figures and reminds us of the glories that both inhabit and surround us all. Denis Flannery, editor of The Cambridge Companion to David Bowie
'Words, sounds and silences are explored closely as Nicholas Royle explains the intertextuality between two writers we had never thought were linked so intimately. Nick Smart, editor of David Bowie: Glamour magazine
'Extraordinary. Its brilliant. I finished it late last night. I couldnt, as they say, put it down. Nicholas Royle, author of London Gothic
one of the best and most original books Ive ever read.' Rupert Loydell, The International Times
'If you are a fan of David Bowie, Enid Blyton, or indeed sun machines you need to read this book. It is eye-opening. I loved it! With Just a Hint of Mayhem blog -- .