Robert Lankamp
Like many other writers, Robert Lankamp dabbled in various genres – notably punk poetry and black humour science fiction – before he finally settled on writing about the funny aliens next door. He lives near the beach with his dog (Jimmy) in the pleasant seaside city of The Hague, Holland. You’ll be relieved to hear that he has finally achieved a thin veneer of respectability as an English professor at Leiden.
Was published in:
Discovering a Comet
and
More Micro-Fiction
ISBN 1-905599-46-3
£7.99 (plus £1 p&p)
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Imagine this: coming downstairs on a winter's morning to find that someone has shoved a tiny comet through your letterbox. Unwanted celestial light has faded the dado rail and a montage of family photographs is all askew from the eccentric orbit that it's assumed, on an axis from the umbrella stand to the cloakroom door.
Extract from runner-up ‘Discovering a Comet’ by Pauline Masurel.
Discovering a Comet and More Micro-Fiction contains the winning entries from Leaf Books’ 2008 micro-fiction competition. From tiny comets invading your airing cupboard to still life paintings that refuse to come alive to, in Freda Love Smith’s winning story ‘Jesse and Jesus’, questions that refuse to be answered but ask you to love them all the same, it’s essentially just a bumper assorted collection of total brilliance.




