Evil Machines
Evil Machines is a 2011 book of fantasy stories written by Monty Python's Terry Jones. The book has a cover design and illustrations by Ryan Gillard and Keira Kinsella.
Author | Terry Jones |
---|---|
Illustrator | Ryan Gillard and Keira Kinsella |
Country | England |
Language | English |
Genre | Fantasy literature |
Publisher | 2011 Unbound |
Pages | 248 (special edition) |
ISBN | 978-1-908717-01-6 |
The book is the first in the world to have been published by a crowd funding website which is solely dedicated to books, www.Unbound.co.uk.
The book contains thirteen short stories linked by a common theme which emerges part way through the series. The concept for the stories came to Jones in a car - "I was actually driving across London and I think I got held up by a red traffic light and suddenly the phrase, "Evil machines", drifted across my mind and I thought "Well that's a good title and I could use that", so I went home and started writing the stories."
The stories became the libretto for an opera staged in Lisbon in 2008 and Jones always intended to re-write them. However other events intervened and he left them as-was until a conversation with Justin Pollard of Unbound prompted their publication several years after they were first written.
The story listing is as follows:
- The Truthful Phone
- The Nice Bomb
- The Lift That Took People to Places They Didn't Want to Go
- Motorbike Thieves
- The Kidnap Car
- The Vacuum Cleaner That Was Too Powerful
- The Train to Anywhere
- The Rocket to Hell
- The Dog Maker and Other Wonders
- The Day Things Started to Go Wrong
- The Castle of Imagination
- The End of Life
- The Love Machine
The launch took place on Friday 4 November 2011 at the Adam Street Club, London, UK. The UK media celebrity Stephen Fry was an expected guest but unable to attend due to a late flight into Dubai. At the launch Jones indicated that "The Nice Bomb" and "The Lift That Took People to Places They Didn't Want to Go" were probably the two stories of which he was most fond.
The stories generally feature a sting in the tail, with, for example, the UK City of Swindon being lampooned in "The Lift That Took People to Places They Didn't Want to Go".