David Hayes

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David Hayes



Average rating: 3.69 · 1,192 ratings · 53 reviews · 134 distinct worksSimilar authors
What Has He Done Now?: Tale...

3.56 avg rating — 888 ratings — published 2016 — 3 editions
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Mysteria: A book of spooky ...

4.67 avg rating — 57 ratings — published 2017 — 2 editions
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The Lost Squadron: A True S...

3.86 avg rating — 28 ratings — published 1994 — 8 editions
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Ghosts and Other Aberrations

4.60 avg rating — 20 ratings2 editions
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Echoes From a Cobbled Stree...

4.79 avg rating — 19 ratings2 editions
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Diabetes Freedom: A Step-by...

4.25 avg rating — 16 ratings
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The Films of the Bowery Boys

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4.38 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 1984 — 7 editions
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Blood Knot: The Trial and C...

2.70 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 1988 — 3 editions
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Phosky and Reedox: Life As ...

3.13 avg rating — 8 ratings3 editions
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Murder Island

3.43 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 2014 — 2 editions
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More books by David Hayes…
Quotes by David Hayes  (?)
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“Girls seemed to be blessed with a natural skill and aptitude for kissing. Where on earth did they learn this? My first introduction to this was at one class Christmas party. We had decided to play 'spin the bottle' and when my turn came I got to kiss a delightful, kind and pretty girl called Joyce. She planted a real good one on me.”
David Hayes, What Has He Done Now?: Tales from a North West Childhood in the 60s and Early 70s

“Stand to attention, soldier"
My grandfather's gentle voice spoke.
I saluted him as I had been shown.
"At ease," he spoke again.
Then he pinned his medals to my shirt
One by one, those shining disks
Almost holy to me
The proof of what I knew
He was my hero”
David Hayes, What Has He Done Now?: Tales from a North West Childhood in the 60s and Early 70s

“A Lancashire Weaver

This place might be haunted
the ghost hunter said
'Midst the dust and the grime
walk the feet of the dead.
The machines now stand idle
Looms clatter no more
There's a stack of old bobbins
piled up by the door.
I remember my Mam
she worked here, so she said
A Lancashire weaver
but now she is dead
Along with this mill
and along with the dreams
of working mill lasses
and their jobs, so it seems
We once wove the best
cotton cloth in the world
But now that's all gone
on the scrap heap been hurled
The clatter of clogs
on the old cobbled street
the humdrum staccato
from thousands of feet.
Tough work and much hardship
and many a care
Folks they got by
for brass, it was rare
but still we had pride
By Christ, did we ever!
Will it ever come back
The answer is NEVER
This place might be haunted
the ghost hunter said
'Midst the dust and the grime
walk the feet of the dead.
I'm glad that my Mam
never saw it this way
Out in all weathers
came here every day
When this closed down
she had already died
Perhaps just as well
She'd have bloody well cried.”
David Hayes, Echoes From a Cobbled Street: Stories and Poems from the North West

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