Andiee Paviour

Andiee Paviour

Contributions

Biography

Andiee Paviour worked at various jobs including waitressing and sales before beginning work as a journalist with Mode magazine. She has worked as the film reviewer for Who Weekly for 20 years during which she ran the gamut of the good, the bad and the abysmal.

Andiee has written an autobiography Unchain My Heart (1997), relating to the experience of having her child abducted by his father, and has woven the trauma of a missing child into her novel Deep Waters (2005). She has also written non-fiction about multiple births.

Her Blog, Nobody’s Reading This but Me  reviews the latest releases. She says:

With this small, whimsically formed blog, I want to make like the old Bing Crosby song and Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive – to celebrate what I love because, God knows, life is too short for torture porn.

Like the girl with the curl, when a film is firing, it’s a very, very good thing. But when it’s a shocker, every second is an eternity.

Contributions

Biography

Andiee Paviour worked at various jobs including waitressing and sales before beginning work as a journalist with Mode magazine. She has worked as the film reviewer for Who Weekly for 20 years during which she ran the gamut of the good, the bad and the abysmal.

Andiee has written an autobiography Unchain My Heart (1997), relating to the experience of having her child abducted by his father, and has woven the trauma of a missing child into her novel Deep Waters (2005). She has also written non-fiction about multiple births.

Her Blog, Nobody’s Reading This but Me  reviews the latest releases. She says:

With this small, whimsically formed blog, I want to make like the old Bing Crosby song and Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive – to celebrate what I love because, God knows, life is too short for torture porn.

Like the girl with the curl, when a film is firing, it’s a very, very good thing. But when it’s a shocker, every second is an eternity.