Publishing Schedule 2010

Syntagma Books will be posting its new publishing schedule for 2010 shortly.

We aim to publish at least four original titles during the year, and up to four reprints.

Stay in touch for announcements.

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Site makeover for New Year

When Syntagma Books was started, just a few short months ago, I thought it a good wheeze to make the site so simple it hardly registered on visitors’ radar, while the books stood out in grand 3-D relief.

The current design, straight off the shelf, fulfilled those modest aims.

However, our first title, The Eternal Quest for Immortality: Is it staring you in the face? by John Evans, is creating such a stir it could be heading for bestseller status. Clearly, something more splendid is called for here at HQ.

Consequently, we are planning a bespoke redesign of this site in the New Year, and have called on our usual maestro, Thord Daniel Hedengren, to create the magic.

More information later.

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Order Eternal Quest now

Special Christmas Offer

With the postal strike now over, UK readers can benefit from fast, discounted delivery of The Eternal Quest for Immortality — Is it staring you in the face? by John Evans, published by Syntagma Books.

Buy now at the reduced price of £10, which includes first class delivery to your door. First orders will go out next week. Hit the button for secure payment by credit card or PayPal.



All other countries, buy from Amazon or usual outlets. The book is now available from Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk.

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Self-help for a decade of austerity

Syntagma Books is opening another strand in our publishing programme: self-help books designed for for the decade of austerity to come. They can be in any form, financial, psychological, motivational, but must be original and have something to say that hasn’t been said before — within reason, of course.

Any authors with new books in these areas are invited to apply.*

*Electronic submissions only.

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Next Title: Huntingtower by John Buchan

UPDATE: All John Buchan’s books are still in copyright until next year, 2010. There will be a delay in publishing Huntingtower.

Syntagma Books’ next title will be Huntingtower, one of John Buchan’s best-loved novels, or romances, as he preferred to call them.

There follows a delightful newspaper review of the book from the year of publication, 1922:

August 4th 1922
MR. BUCHAN’S LATEST ROMANCE

Huntingtower, by John Buchan.

(Hodder and Stoughton. 7s. 6d. net).

This story shows us Mr Buchan engaged in turning over and recombining into fresh groupings a heap of more or less familiar romantic “properties”. His setting is the Scottish seacoast, and an untenanted mansion, in charge of a crew of surly, furtive lodgekeepers, who have something to hide, and betray the fact; and of a rough inn-keeper, who is desperately anxious to dissuade travellers from staying at his house.

They work under the direction of one Loudon, a factor, and a bluff, hearty, weather-tanned fellow, who makes the pleasantest impression of a wholesome open-air sportsman, till at length, we are allowed to detect in him just a fugitive gleam of something faintly suspicious. Loudon is good, in the traditional manner.

There is a Danish brig, and a landing by a boat’s crew of villains by night, and in stormy weather. There is, inevitably, a beautiful foreign girl, suitably provided with unscrupulous enemies, and with an unwelcome lover, “beautiful as a devil,” who will stick at nothing. For the necessary contrast of the prosaic with the picturesque there is a middle-aged and wealthy Glasgow grocer, timid and respectable by habit, though a stout-hearted fellow at bottom, who has sold his business and blunders into this whirl of picturesque violence at the bidding of a life-long passion for romance, which his retirement has set him free at last to indulge.

Dickson McCunn has many engaging qualities besides his simplicity and kindliness. He has a harmless vanity which makes him thrill with pride when he over hears praises of “D. McCunn, the great provision merchant”, a praiseworthy habit of carrying Izaak Walton in his pocket when he goes on pilgrimage, and an invincible belief that what is needed to defeat the lovely foreigner’s enemies is the ‘sound business head’ which has brought him his prosperity and modest fame.

As a piquant novelty Mr. Buchan has hit upon the device of introducing a band of ragged Glasgow lads, formed into an unofficial body of boy scouts. In the exuberance of their youth, they march to such songs as “Class-conscious are we, and class-conscious wull be, Till our fit’s on the neck of the Boorjoyzee”, learned by one of their members at a Socialist Sunday school. But these are battle hymns, sung for the sake of their rhythm, without regard to their meaning, and the boys are unreservedly, not to say violently, on the side of law and order.

They are amusing; but we wish Mr. Buchan could have made his villains anything but Bolshevists. The Bolshevist crops up in every shocker nowadays; but for romantic value he is, say, to the old-fashioned pirate, as a penny is to a pound. His associations are not picturesque at all, but merely ugly, and as a figure of romance he stands far below even the nihilist of a generation ago, who figured bravely enough in many of the older stories.

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