About the Books
Tea or Coffee?
Serious yet hysterical, mesmerizing characters lead us to excitement…
Inspired by a lecture she attended, Regina Stanton, a young journalist, embarks on a journey
through the forces determining contemporary Australian culture.
Leaving behind the vestiges of a failed romance, she travels to the Whitsunday Coast in
Australia's tropical north-east, where she meets Tyro. She spends five days basking in the
sun, and sampling fine wine in her new companion's monsoon forest retreat where Tyro
recounts his experiences of life in Papua New Guinea, providing an insightful perspective of
the political and social framework of the time.
Set in 2015, this novel offers a disturbing yet thoroughly absorbing view of a future that
includes a benign conspiracy to overcome mounting civil unrest that threatens to tear
Australia apart. It is truly about life’s tapestry. It is disturbingly sober and subtle. Find out
more as author Rednik takes you on the journey of Tea and Coffee…
Warp
A hilarious and a batty huddle faces a different world! Turn tears into laughter as you join the
journey of these people...
Apart from frequent mention of aeroplanes and airlines, this collection of short stories is
eclectic. It deals with emotions, humor, bad taste, stupidity, grief, flashes of brilliance, and
horror; just some of life's interesting things.
The author sees them all like the threads in a tapestry, while the people comprise themselves
in The Warp. The author had the chance to meet a lot of wild people, mostly involved in
development assistance in developing and transitional countries.
Get to know the characters of Remulas the renaissance man; Chingai, the disturbed and accommodating woman of
Mindoro; Pete, the dispossessed engineer from Zimbabwe; Gopal, the good Brahman of
Imphal; and Aziz and Francoise, as they travel in Tajikistan and Afghanistan. Rednik also has corresponded with an unusual Dane. They have not met, but co-wrote three of the stories.
The Warp will make you laugh and question why you are doing so. It has no contents page,
and should be read from the front to the back. The last chapter is an essay rather than a
story. It discusses the events in New York in 2002 in a way that will make you think.
So now, start your odyssey as author Rednik takes you to the crowd of The Warp…
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