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I've read his book "Forget Heaven Just Kiss Me", and started "A price above pearls" or something like that. It's been over 10 years, is there a place I can find his books now? I really enjoyed him, and don't care to have the books "violated for the US market."

2006-09-28 03:41:01 · 4 answers · asked by MamaSunshine 4 in Entertainment & Music Other - Entertainment

He may be on radio, I know he was a reporter for the BBC.

2006-09-28 03:49:00 · update #1

4 answers

Not sure if it's the same guy as the broadcaster/journalist, but I'd suggest having a look on amazon.co.uk (or waterstones.co.uk, which appears to be run by amazon too) - you'll just have to pay a bit extra for the conversion from sterling and deal with international shipping costs.

2006-09-28 03:50:03 · answer #1 · answered by lauriekins 5 · 1 0

He does a bbc radio 2 slot 12/2 was he not in the group the clash?
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Jeremy Vine
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Jeremy Vine (born May 17, 1965, Epsom, England) is a current affairs presenter on BBC radio and television.

Vine was educated at Epsom College in Surrey and Durham University (Hatfield College), graduating with a first-class degree in English. He went on to a journalism training course with the Coventry Evening Telegraph before joining the BBC in 1987.

His career at the BBC included reading the news on radio in Northern Ireland and working as a researcher on the BBC1 religious-affairs series Heart of the Matter. In 1989 he became a regular reporter on the Radio 4 programme Today, filing reports from across Europe, from Ireland to Siberia.

While working for Today, he published two comic novels set amid the modern Church of England, Forget Heaven, Just Kiss Me (1992) and The Whole World In My Hands (1993). They were not very successful and Vine now regards them as juvenilia.

In the mid-1990s he became familiar to BBC TV viewers as a political reporter, reporting on the modernisation of the Labour Party and later making a mark with his irreverent reports on the 1997 General Election. He is known for his direct and some would say abrasive interview style.

He became a regular presenter of BBC2's Newsnight in 1999, and was one of the original presenters of Broadcasting House on Radio 4. After several stints as a stand-in for Jimmy Young on Radio 2 in 2001-2002, he took over the 12 midday show permanently in January 2003, though the show became shrouded in controversy when it emerged that Young had not retired voluntarily as had originally been claimed.

Vine is one of the most prominent openly Christian broadcasters in the UK and has also presented numerous religious-themed programmes for the BBC. His regular programme frequently addresses religious affairs, or covers world events from a religious angle, as well as featuring many mawkish human interest stories.

Vine is fond of remarking "amazing story" when trailing items on his programme. It is not clear whether this is hyperbole or whether Vine is just easily amazed.

In 2005 Vine won the best speech broadcaster award at the Sony Radio Academy Awards and on December 14th was announced as Peter Snow's replacement manning the election graphics, including the famous Swingometer from May 2006.

He also presented The Politics Show on BBC1 from its launch in 2003 until Jon Sopel took over in 2005.

Jeremy is the older brother of comedian Tim Vine.

[edit]
External links
BBC Biography.
Jeremy and his wife at the Sony Awards
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Vine"
Categories: 1965 births | Living people | Alumni of the University of Durham | BBC Radio 2 DJs | British journalists | British radio personalities | British radio DJs | English television presenters
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2006-09-28 03:51:23 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Is that the same guy who does Radio 2...?

2006-09-28 03:46:06 · answer #3 · answered by Nneave 4 · 0 0

If it is the same guy off Radio 2, I hope he writes better than his shows. What a bore!

2006-09-28 03:49:49 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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