Martyn’s Books: Explore Cultural Journeys


Welcom to the world of Martyn’s books. Martyn Jones, Martyn de Tours and Martyn Bey, a literary trinity. These are my books. Buy. Read. Share. Enjoy!

Especially, enjoy!

My books featured here are:

Bandoxa: A Celtic Journey

Building Insight

Celtic Domination

Come In Pink

F*CK DATA MESH

Galés.com

Good Leader/Bad Leader

Head Over Heels

Laughing @ Data.Com

Make Analytics Great Again

Revealing Wealth

The Data Dialogues

The End of Honour

The Philosopher’s Dog

First Impressions

The Good Data Bible

The goodstrat.com Reader

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Exploring Purpose: Insights from Rabbi Leo Azul

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Martyn de Tours

A Preordained Destiny

BBC News: We are here today with Rabbi Leo Azul, the spiritual adviser to Martyn de Tours. Can you tell us a lottle about your relationship with the author?

Rabbi Leo Azul: A “lottle“?

BBC News: [Correcting the tiny mistake.] A little. Can you tell us a little about your relationship with the author?

Rabbi Leo Azul: A lottle here, a shmottle there! Who cares? Just don’t let it take centre stage.

BBC News: So, you are his adviser and confidant, right?

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Films That We Have Loved

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Martyn Richard Jones, Spain 8th July 2025

We frequently reveal a little of ourselves when we disclose the things we detest and love. Especially little things that delight, fascinate, and entertain us. Here are ten films that I have taken as my own. Of course, the choice is highly arbitrary, and I love many more movies. I am using these devices. They help me reconstruct the foundations of my life. This was before my journey to Galicia. They also support my current life in Bandoxa. They are films, but they also form a small part of my identity.

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Trump’s NATO Demands: A Shift to Transactional Security

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President Donald Trump’s recent comments about NATO do not indicate a call for collective security reform. Instead, they reveal an intensely transactional view of international partnerships. Urging alliance members to assign as much as 5% of their GDP, an unprecedented figure, to purchasing U.S.-made weaponry and military equipment, Trump has once again reframed global security as a business deal.

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Keir Starmer: A Cult of Mediocrity We Need to Break

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Afilonius Rex and Martyn Jones

Picture the scene. It’s Prime Minister’s Questions, the great gladiatorial stage of British democracy, less Gladiator and more Blazing Saddles at a town planning meeting in Swindon. Keir Starmer, sensible Labour’s hero, their knight in gleaming, sensible shoes, rises from the opposition bench. That look on his face, you know the one, shows a man who’s just alphabetised his law books and is ready to go. Across the gallery, Rishi Sunak sits there, gleaming, like a waxwork who’s been told he has to look “empathetic” by 5 p.m. or he’ll be back in the dock. Starmer adjusts his glasses and launches into one of his trademark cross-examinations. It’s like watching a lawyer interrogate a spreadsheet. “Point one, Mr Speaker!” He declares, and you can hear the ghost of Mel Brooks shouting, “What’s wrong with this guy? Where’s the dynamism?” He cites a statistic: a 17.3% increase in NHS waiting times, in case you’re wondering, and it isn’t. Then another: a £3.2 billion shortfall in council budgets. It’s meticulous, it’s legal, it’s as if he’s building a case to prosecute a toaster for breach of warranty. By the time he gets to his witty quip, “The failure of this government isn’t just a policy, it’s a personality trait!”, he drops like a Gregg’s custard tart allowed to fall by a woman worried about her cleaning bills.

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