Author: Nick Spalding
ISBN: 9781452330419
Page count: Approx 140
Genre: Humor
Price: $1.49
Author Bio:
Nick Spalding is a writer who has thus far made his living as a copywriter for a marketing company. As talking rubbish for a living can get tiresome (for anyone other than a politician), he also writes fiction on the side, hoping to be an author full-time one day.
Nick lives in the South of England in a three bed house…which is cleaner than you’d expect for a single, heterosexual male. He suffers from insomnia now and again and is deathly afraid of sponges.
Nick also once had sex with a stripper at an AC/DC concert. This has nothing to do with the contents of his books – he just wants everyone to know about it.
Tell us about your book:
“I’m Nick Spalding and I had an idea. What if I tried to write a book about life…with no breaks? An entire book, in one go. Could I do it? And how would it turn out?”
Join author Nick Spalding as he wends his merry way through an odyssey of non-stop writing, covering a variety of subjects in a selection of riotous anecdotes, comedy asides and humorous stories…dredged up from a brain functioning on caffeine, nicotine and the occasional chocolate biscuit.
The book is written as a conversation with YOU, the reader…and with Nick you’ll venture into the thorny topics of love, life, death, sex, money, horribly timed bowel movements and a deathly fear of sponges (amongst other things).
After you’ve read ‘Life…with no breaks’, there’s a very good chance you may never look at the world again the same way!
How long did it take to write the book?
30 hours! From 6pm on a Saturday night to midnight on the Monday.
What inspired you to write the book?
I woke up one morning with the thought in my head!
Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?
Er…not really appropriate for this book J But I survived on caffeine, nicotine and a slight mental imbalance…
What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?
I hope they’ve had fun, laughed a lot and feel a little better about themselves J
Where can we go to buy your book?
It’s available currently at Amazon, Smashwords and will soon be available on the iBook store, Barnes and Noble and Sony.
Any other links or info you’d like to share?
Follow me at Twitter with the name Spalding_Author and check out my author’s page at Amazon Author’s Central – leave a post!
Excerpt from book:
Extract One from ‘Life…With No Breaks’ by Nick Spalding: (NOTE: just over 1,000 words)
Cast your mind back a few chapters and you may recall I talked about a trip to Las Vegas with my cousin.
I promised I would speak more on the subject and the time has arrived to do just that. As Vegas is generally considered to be the home of sinners and dodgy morality, what better place to investigate the idea of watching sex in public, eh?
James had one ambition while in Las Vegas. He wanted to visit a strip club.
Not just any strip club, but one where young ladies would entertain the customers with large and vibrating rubber implements.
It may sound like James was a colossal pervert, but in reality, he just wanted to ‘broaden his horizons’ before marriage.
Personally, I would have broadened my horizons by not marrying the pasty looking rodent of a woman he was betrothed to, but then who am I to judge?
So off we all went one night … seven partially drunk British men in a cab, wallets stuffed with bills of low denomination to be placed in the g-strings of the local good time girls.
The cab driver, a grumpy looking individual who’d done this kind of thing a million times, takes us to a strip club called ‘Rhinestones’.
This turns out to be a dreadfully tacky looking place (even by Vegas standards) with some large plastic cow-girl statues parked outside the entrance and the kind of exterior lighting you’d normally find on aircraft carriers at sea.
It may have been one o’clock in the morning, but I still needed sunglasses to look at the damn place.
We all go in, naughty school boy expressions on our faces and are greeted – not by a semi-clad lovely, but by a grinning fat man in a suit three sizes too small for him.
“Hello boys! Come for some fun with the girls, have you?!”
No mate, we’re here to check your plumbing…
James, too carried away to bother with sarcasm, nods his head enthusiastically and requests a private table and ‘the works’.
The fat pimp grins even more and leads us to a private booth at the back of the club.
He takes our money (grinning all the while) and retires.
A few moments later, three women enter the booth. They are not what you’d call ‘stunners’.
Stunted maybe, but definitely not the kind of woman you see frequenting the front cover of glossy men’s magazines.
None of them look particularly healthy and I’m pretty sure the tall brunette is in her late forties.
The red head in the cowboy hat looks like she’s suffering with a good case of acne and the blonde one appears to be cross-eyed.
They’re dressed in a variety of sexually alluring outfits, which feature a lot of leather, rubber and (of course) rhinestones.
Two of them jump onto the table in front of us, while the cross-eyed one walks uncertainly over to the back of the room and picks up a large black bag. I’m fairly sure she’s walking slowly so as not to bump into any of the walls.
James and the others start to make strange cat-calls and grunts of excitement. When an American does this it sounds loud, brash and heartfelt. When a British man does it, it sounds like he’s feeling very awkward and in need of the toilet.
I join in, trying to get into the spirit of things.
The two girls start to fondle one another on the table. Items of clothing are removed and much slapping of flesh and licking of lips follows. The cross-eyed one starts to delve into the black bag, producing an increasingly eclectic variety of sex toys.
There are long ones, there are short ones. Some vibrate, some are tied together with rope. They come in various shades of black, red, purple, pink and green. One looks like something you’d use to clean your fish tank with.
Cross-eyes hands some of these to the two on the table, who proceed to insert them into various orifices.
Contrary to what you might believe, this is not arousing. What it is…is mechanical.
I might as well be watching robots putting a BMW together for all the sexual thrill it’s giving me.
You can easily tell these girls have done it a thousand times for groups of men much like this. You get the impression that while they’re poking implements into each other and moaning gratuitously, they’re also thinking about what food to buy for the cat and what time Oprah’s on that evening.
Unbelievably, I’m starting to get bored.
The others look to be more into it than I am, though I’m sure they’re faking most of their excitement to keep up appearances.
Miss Cross-eyes then asks me if I’d like her to sit on my lap. I give her a terrified look and, metaphorically, straighten my tie.
I’m acting so damnably British, it almost hurts:
“Oh…er…no thank you. I’m quite alright as I am, but you’re very kind for asking.”
What a stud, eh?
She looks at me in disgust and turns to help with the implement insertion. This gynecological display goes on for another five minutes or so, with the girls collecting up a nice bundle of singles, fives and tens.
By this time, I’ve started looking closely at the curtains, wondering if they’d look good in my bathroom back home.
The fat guy puts an end to the fun by sticking his head through the curtain and telling us the show’s over. I’m quite relieved by this.
The girls immediately stop acting like rutting hyenas and bugger off back into the dressing room to clean up before the next load of horny idiots come-a-knockin’.
I ask James if he’s happy. He nods his head slowly, as if not entirely sure he believes it.
We return as wiser men to the nightclub proper and proceed to get drunk on vastly over-priced lager.
James got successfully married to his woman in the end and as far as I know the Vegas sex show has never been mentioned in their household.
Every time I see him however, I like to go cross-eyed for a moment and ask him if he’s cleaned his fish tank recently.
It always cracks him up.
ENDS EXTRACT
Extract Two from ‘Life…With No Breaks’ by Nick Spalding: (NOTE: just over 1,000 words)
Of the ‘sensible’ phobias, I’m only affected by needles. I hate the bloody things. I don’t care if you are administering life-saving antibiotics, you’re still intent on sticking a large pointy metal object into my body, which in my book is a distinct no-no.
At the other end of the phobia scale are the quote ‘silly ones’.
These can be about anything:
Chickens, fruit, bricks, worms, top-hats, Milton Keynes, Britney Spears. Anything.
In my case it just so happens to be sponges.
Don’t get me wrong, put me in a room with a sponge on the table and I’m not going to start screaming in terror and bashing up the furniture to make a crucifix. But…I will start to feel ever so slightly anxious after a while and will be happy to leave the room, breathing a deep sigh of relief as I do.
They’re just so creepy.
Take a look at one. It’s all holes and rough textures, isn’t it? You spread it apart in your hands and those holes get bigger and become miniature caverns leading into the heart of the monster.
Eurghh.
I can’t touch one. It makes me shudder just thinking about it.
Look! I’m shuddering right now as I write.
The irregularly shaped ones are the worst, the ones that come straight out of the ocean. All pointy and rough and ready to leap onto my face and suffocate me in seconds.
I can handle the shop bought ones. The rounded edges and tightly packed holes are a bit more bearable, but not by much.
If anyone ever plans on mugging me, they won’t have to worry about finding a hand gun or a knife. All they’ll have to do is wave a loofah in my general direction and I’ll hand over my life-savings and first-born.
To get to the bottom of this irrational fear, I asked my mother if there were any episodes in my infancy that might account for it. She racked her brains trying to think of one and couldn’t come up with anything.
A few months later however, she remembered when I was a small baby, I would like nothing more during a bath than to chew intently on whatever came nearest to hand.
My mother remembered she always had a large sponge with her at bath times and it would invariably end up in my gob at some point.
From this, I can only deduce at some point in my mastication of the sponge I must have bitten off a small piece and choked on it. I had obviously cleared the obstruction without my mother noticing, but the trauma of it had wormed its way into my sub-conscious, waiting to pop up in adult life and embarrass me at dinner parties.
Having some knowledge of where the problem stemmed from did not make me less afraid of the horrid squelchy things, though.
On the contrary, I now had another thing to add to my growing catalogue of sponge-related horrors…choking to death on the blasted thing.
I’ve tried in the past to confront my fear without much success.
I once took a bath and had a small inoffensive sponge with me to test my mettle in the face of adversity. There it sat, on the edge of the bath, squatting like a malevolent purple, squishy monster…just waiting for me to turn my attention away for a second before launching itself at my head like that face-hugger thing in Alien.
Summoning up reserves of courage I didn’t know I had, I picked up the sponge and started to scrub my back with it.
It felt like dragging the hand of a corpse across my flesh.
Giving one of my patented ‘small girl getting her pig-tails pulled’ screams, I held the offending object away from me like it was going to explode.
Then I lobbed the sponge across the bathroom.
It flew in a spinning arc, flinging droplets of water all over the shop before coming to rest with a squidgy plop down by the radiator.
The rest of the bath was conducted using a flannel, between suspicious glances over at the slimy monster, which I’m sure was leering at me.
There it stayed.
…For two weeks.
I eventually picked it up with a pair of salad tongs and dumped it in the wheelie bin. Bomb disposal experts would have recognised the expression on my face as I dropped it in and slammed down the lid.
That was where my great sponge experiment ended…in defeat and despondency.
For a blissful few years I managed to avoid sponges.
My life was sponge free.
Then I got married.
Unlike me, my wife had no such qualms against scraping sponges across her body and would do so at every given opportunity. This meant the bathroom became a chamber of horrors, with sponges of every shape, hue and texture lined up like malevolent goblins on the cabinet.
My mistake was not confessing to my new wife I was scared of them.
It’s just not the kind of thing you want to do is it? You’ve just got married and at this point your new spouse (hopefully) still sees you in a good light. It wouldn’t do anything for your reputation to admit you’re terrified of a bloody sponge.
So I suffered in silence and the sponges mounted up.
She seemed to go through them at an obscene rate of knots and every couple of months or so I’d be presented with a new one to kick start the nervous adrenaline.
I’d just about get used to the long blue sausage shaped one (enough to be in the same room with it anyway) and she’d swap the bloody thing out for some brown, plate-sized monstrosity, that looked like a creeping fungus blown up five hundred times under the microscope.
I did eventually pluck up the courage to tell her about my ridiculous phobia. She managed to keep a straight face for nearly two whole minutes.
When I’d managed to impress upon her the seriousness of the matter, she started to sympathise a bit. The sponges were then shut away in her half of the bathroom cabinet, so I didn’t have to look at them. But I always felt my heartbeat rise slightly when I opened my half to get the shaving foam out.
I’m going to move on now, as I’ve given myself the creeps.
ENDS EXTRACT








July 6, 2010
Aw shucks, ain’t it nice to be featured…
And for anyone that reads this feature and scrolls all the way down here to the comments…you win a prize!
Well, a Smashwords coupon for the book so you can pick it up for the ridiculously cheap price of just 99 cents until the end of July
Here’s the code: XH54A
Please also leave a review or the book at Smashwords or a comment right here, if you’d be so kind
Best wishes,
Nick