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The Antipope (Smartpass Mp3s)
 
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The Antipope (Smartpass Mp3s) [MP3 Audio] [MP3 CD]

Robert Rankin
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
RRP: £20.41
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Product details

  • MP3 CD: 450 pages
  • Publisher: SmartPass Ltd; MP3-compact disc edition (1 Mar 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1903362334
  • ISBN-13: 978-1903362334
  • Product Dimensions: 13.6 x 12.4 x 1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,253,611 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Robert Rankin
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Product Description

Review

The casting is strong and performances professional, with the author himself thoroughly whipped into shape as a starring narrator. This is truly marvellous late-night listening. Buy it at any price. --Diverse Books

This audio version is a labour of love and the result is something more than an audiobook. Impressive and a lot of fun, much less dry than straightforward audiobooks have a tendency to be. If you love Rankin, this is a must-buy. If you've never read him, this is a great introduction. If you hate his stuff, buy it anyway it'd be a shame if the same team don't go on to produce audio books of his even better novels. --SFX magazine

Product Description

Robert Rankin's cult classic THE ANTIPOPE is the first ever SPAudiobooks experience. Narrated by the author with specially commissioned music, evocative sound effects, and dramatised dialogue from a cast including David Gooderson (Davros of retro Doctor Who) and Lucy Robinson (Frau Clovis of modern Doctor Who). Created by 3-time Spoken Word Award winners, SmartPass, (under the guise of SPAudiobooks) their trademark full-cast drama with narration makes Rankin's first novel spring off the page and into the far-fetched world of his own creation. Since the novel was published in 1981, Rankin has been recrafting the nondescript London suburb of Brentford (the novel s setting) into an alternative universe where the local eccentrics become unwittingly involved in intergalactic plots and ancient supernatural evil, discussing their plight over beer and fags. Starring Andy Greenhalgh, Ben Crowe, Harry Myers, Nick Murchie, David Gooderson, Lucy Robinson, Sally Hurst, Colin Campbell and Robert Rankin as the narrator. Original music composed and performed by Will Rankin.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Robert Rankin - brilliant as always. Follow the two drunken heros Pooley and Omally as they fight evil in the town of Brentford where the most important thing for everybody is to make easy money and cheat even your best friend into buying you beer.

The characters are the best part of the whole Brentford series. They all have strong personalities, and you get to know them well which makes it even funnier to read about their reactions in certain situations.

Also, Rankin changes between the subtle, the explicit, the beautiful and the outright vulgar. You never know what he throws at you next.

This one is a definite must read for everybody who appreciates humour and recognizes the subtle differences in the choice of words.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I hadn't realised just how good a writer Robert Rankin was until I heard this wonderful dramatisation back in 2003. The Audio Antipope is an eight-CD set, running to a little under ten hours, bravely complete and unabridged. Full cast list included after the review here...

I had previously read and loved some of the later Brentford novels, of course, but nothing in fact from the seminal pair of volumes that started it all. I specifically link 'The Antipope' and 'The Brentford Triangle' in this way, of course, for two startlingly good reasons. First, about one-third of the 'Antipope' ms had to be culled before Pan would publish it, and much of this material found its way into the sequel. Second, this abundence of preparation, combined with Robert taking the opportunity to write around-the-clock (as opposed to several months part-time) meant that the sequel was practically finished in about three weeks. And I now know what he means when he says that, once they are let loose, Messrs. Pooley and Omally and their contemporaries usually 'write themselves'. There is little sense here of pain in the composition, only (quite rightly) pain in the experiences of the characters themselves, as they are carried along only semi-voluntarily in a flood of unnatural events that at first glance belong in Brentford like a herd of rhino belong in the English National Ballet. Stranger things have surely never happened.

Pooley and Omally are a delightful pair of cowardly, malingering dipsomaniacs loosely based on the author himself and an old schoolfriend of his. I pass no judgement on the matter. The characters around them all have something of the night, even if the night in question is just a typical one at Brentford's Flying Swan public house once the blinds and bolts are down, for they are all of the author's real-life acquaintance, athough Norman's shop is in truth not so Norman's as it was twenty-odd years ago, and I use the term 'real-life' purely for the sake of brevity. Precis? The lads team up with the aged and kindly local enigma that is Professor Slocombe to fight the ancient evil that befalls their Borough. They drink, are intrigued, drink, make enquiries, drink, get into trouble, drink, get distracted, drink, fight, run away, drink some more and fight some more and finally meet the end of the novel where they pop off for a quick drink in readiness for the next one.

As Director and Co-Producer, not to mention uncredited cast member, extra and (most importantly) Editor, the remarkable Phil Viner has achieved here something that makes your typical audio book sound like canal mud drying. The casting is strong and performances thoroughly professional, right down to some wonderful little cameos by friends old and new. Greenhalgh, Crowe and Gooderson are believable as Pooley, Omally and Slocombe, while Murchie and Campbell make a suitably deranged Neville and Archroy when required, and special credit has to go to Harry Myers for bringing the title character to life without stifling his theatricality.

Under Viner's direction, the author himself has been thoroughly whipped into shape as a starring narrator. Robert's son William's music is a revelation, matching the moods of many scenes and building atmosphere beyond the reach of most radio productions. And Robert's then-partner Sally performs perfectly alongside Robinson, as brewery salesgirls Sandra and Mandy, among others (if you haven't heard of Lucy Robinson yet, buy a bloody television). This is marvellous late-night listening, that would be Radio 4's 'Book at Bedtime' for an entire month if the BBC management weren't still a load of talentless inbreds.

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DETAIL:

Starring
Andy Greenhalgh as Jim Pooley
Ben Crowe as John Omally
Robert Rankin as The Narrator
With
Nick Murchie as Neville
Colin Campbell as Archroy
David Gooderson as Professor Slocombe
Harry Myers as [Pope Alexander VI]
Sally Hurst as Sandra
Lucy Robinson (Pride & Prejudice, Emma, lots of telly) as Mandy

Directed by award-winner Phil Viner.
Produced by Jools Viner and Phil Viner.

"All other parts are played by members of the cast", although Norman was clearly one of those played by the Producer-Director himself.
Original music composed and performed by William Rankin.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Persistently amusing. 23 Oct 1998
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This is one of my favorite books. It's the first of the Brentford series. I find the whole series to be comfortable, likable and highly amusing. It helps to have a taste for the surreal. I found the characters to be very likable. They have the care free attitudes of the characters from Steinbeck's Tortilla Flat or Cannery Row, but they are intelligent and educated. They are not the type one would expect to be called upon to save the world. Essentially Brentford is the world. Should any character temporarily wander out of Brentford, Brentford would still be the reference point. The pub is the core essence of this world. Nothing is really serious unless it effects the pub. To this little world comes every silly notion that ever landed on the front page of the most bizarre tabloids. The Antipope is the place to start. It's one of the best, and will introduce you to the Brentford perspective. I found after reading a few pages, I wanted to take a break and wait for the smile on my face to ease up a little before I dared to proceed.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
A working class version of hitchhikers guide to the galaxy
The first of the elongated trilogy. It is not the best but it still very funny. His characters are certainly memorable and generate a lot of the humour. Read more
Published 18 months ago by The Emperor
Why use one word when you can use 40?
This book made me feel like a child again - and not in the good way. I felt as if I was reading something that was way above my head. Read more
Published on 28 May 2010 by J. R. Johnson-Rollings
Great book
This is the first book in the Brentford tringle. Have read about a 100 pages and loving it so far. Am going to order the rest of the serie I thing
Published on 8 Jun 2009 by Asgeir Misund
The Antipope it's an audio experience!
I've only recently started sampling the works of Robert Rankin, so I only had a vague idea of what to expect. Read more
Published on 1 Feb 2009 by I. N. Bateman
Reprobates of the world UNITE!
You have nothing to loose but your shillings!

Came across this looking for an alternative to El Prat - and not disappointed. Read more
Published on 4 Feb 2008 by A.K.Farrar
enjoyable, but not fully engaging
This is the first of this author's books I have read and I did find that it took a while to get into it. Read more
Published on 14 Mar 2007 by al m
Making Normal Weird
The first book in the -arguably - five book series.

We follow the lives of a range of Brentonians over a period of time that their way of life is under threat from a power crazed... Read more

Published on 3 Jan 2005 by aceadrian
A life changing experience!
As a part-time barman myself, I thought I knew all there was to know about working in a pub in Brentford. Thank you Robert Rankin for changing my view of the world forever. Read more
Published on 10 May 2001
good laugh
basically centred around 2 guys that spend a lot of time in a pub and the rest battling the supernatural.I mean how can you fault a plot like that. Read more
Published on 11 Jan 2001
Terry Pratchett? I wouldn't give him the time of day.
Rankin's 'Brentford' books are precisely what I wanted out of Terry Pratchett but didn't get.

Pratchett has had so much hype and the reviews on Amazon were so positive that I... Read more

Published on 10 Jan 2000 by Nigel Collier
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