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Monthly Archives: December 2015

‘And Then There Were None’

30 Wednesday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Crime, Drama, Ed, Seen lately, Television, Theatre

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Agatha Christie, And Then There Were None, BBC TV, whodunits

Noose

I was in the happy position over Christmas, watching the amazing And Then There Were None on BBC TV, to be able to compare stage and TV versions of this classic Christie story. A group of ten strangers (each with a deadly and guilty secret in their past) find themselves cut off on an island, invited by the mysterious and apparently absent Mr U N Owen; they are then serially murdered, in the same sequence as in the nursery rhyme Ten Little Soldier Boys.

A group of us saw the Agatha Christie Theatre Company do this at Tunbridge Wells’ Assembly Hall in October, as part of their ten-months-long nationwide tour. (How well they must have known their words by the end!)   The cast included some names familiar to those of us of, er, more mature years: Paul Nicholas (star of the 1980s sitcom Just Good Friends), Mark Wynter (‘60s pop star, with hits such as Venus in Blue Jeans), and Deborah Grant (John Nettles’ ex-wife way back in Bergerac), to name but three.

The stage version gave us atmosphere and a storm, and the sense of being trapped. Unlike a film it couldn’t show us close-ups of bodies on jagged rocks, or transport us in momentary flashback to the Western Front or the drowning of a boy. But it did have the excitement of live theatre. Our group had a happy outing; I couldn’t remember whodunit, and the ending surprised me just as it had when I’d seen a film version years before. (This may have been the 1974 one with Richard Attenborough, Oliver Reed, Elke Sommer et al – this story does seem to appeal to all-star casts).

One of the motifs of the story is that there is on display in the house a group of ten toy soldiers. After each death the remaining characters discover that one of these has disappeared. That is easily effected in a film, but how did it happen on stage? In the interval I asked a fellow member of the audience, and he told me he’d seen one of the actors (one who was killed shortly afterwards) surreptitiously put one in his pocket. Maybe whichever cast member was nearest the toys at the time had the job of secreting one.

In our family we’re still enthusing about the TV version, shown on Boxing Day and the two successive nights in one-hour chunks. Wow! The atmosphere, the tension, the menace – and the absence of the semi-humorous tone you often get in Christie films – more, more! One by one the cast are killed, and they know it and can see it coming, and they fear each other. No supersleuth is there to explain the complexities of what is happening and to unmask the villain.  They just get killed, all ten …

I can see that some folk will have found too long the ominous pauses, but not us. To see Toby Stephens, Charles Dance, Sam Neill, Miranda Richardson and the rest put on their turns was just right for the dark evenings after Christmas when the festive supplies of food and drink need to be finished off.   I can’t see it myself, but the female half of our viewership were also much taken with Aidan Turner’s torso. Once displayed, why it then had to reappear quite so often I don’t know.   Yes, you guessed it – this was the role Oliver Reed played in the 1974 film: I can’t remember whether he kept showing us his chest.

Knowing who did it didn’t spoil my pleasure – indeed, it was fascinating to see the story unfold with that knowledge. What was difficult was not letting anything slip that would give the game away to my fellow viewers. Reader, I managed it.

The Twittersphere raved about the production – and the aforesaid torso was the detail most mentioned in that raving.

My favourite tweet was “They’ve really upped the stakes in the latest series of Big Brother.”

I don’t know why the BBC changed the skeleton in the policeman’s cupboard. In the play (and, I think, the original book) he has been bribed and has committed perjury, resulting in an innocent man being hanged. On TV he has instead kicked a young gay man to death in a police cell. One can only speculate why this change was made. 

Sometime I must read the novel to see how the Queen of Crime herself imagined the story. And to find out how it was that Mr U N Owen came to know all these terrible secrets.

I’ve heard it muttered somewhere that next year we may get Witness for the Prosecution (which I also saw the Agatha Christie Theatre Company do this at the Assembly Hall a few years ago). Bring it on!

 

It’s a Crime!

29 Tuesday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Crimefest, First Draft Competition, Margery Allingham Short Story Competition, Myriad Editions, New Year's Resolution, West Dean College

Here are a couple of crime competitions to work on for early 2016.

First Drafts competition, organised by Myriad Editions/West Dean College is open to writers who have not had a novel or collection of short stories published, or self-published. They are looking for 5,000 words of a work-in-progress (a novel or collection of short stories) in the crime/thriller genre. They also need a synopsis, a covering letter and an entry cheque for £10. Deadline is 31st March.

Unusually, they look to encourage writers who have not yet finished their work – offering the prize of a week-long retreat at West Dean College, near Chichester, and six months of mentoring. Find details at: http://www.myriadeditions.com

The Margery Allingham Short Story Competition organisers are looking for a story that fits Margery’s own definition of what constitutes a mystery. For details check out http://thecwa.co.uk/debuts/short-story-competition

They want up to 3,500 words. The prize is £1,000 and a full pass to CrimeFest 2017. Entry fee: £15. Deadline: 1st March.

Bearing in mind our recent posts, maybe you should book yourself a stay in Oxford to inspire you…

 

Oxford, yet again…

29 Tuesday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Aberdeen, best-sellers, Celebrity University Challenge, Nicci French, Nicci Gerrard, Oxford, psychological thrillers, Sean French, Sheffield

Nicci Gerrard was on the Sheffield Team in last night’s Christmas University Challenge involving distinguished alumni, where they beat Aberdeen 185 points to 90 points.

Apparently Nicci, who co-writes best-selling psychological thrillers with her husband, Sean French, under the pseudonym Nicci French, also studied English Literature at Oxford. Must be something in the water.

Stay away from Oxford

26 Saturday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Books, Crime, Ed, Fiction

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

British Library, Death on the Cherwell, Endeavour, Lewis, Morse, Oxford, whodunits, Zuleika Dobson

Death in Oxford

The arrival in my Christmas stocking of Death on the Cherwell has prompted me to reflect on what a dangerous place Oxford is if you are a fictional character.   Death on the Cherwell is by Mavis Doriel Hay, was first published in 1935, and is in the wonderful British Library Crime Classics series. It looks a cracker (groan …): the body of the Bursar of Persephone College is found floating on the eponymous river by member of an undergraduate secret society ….

Were Oxford not such a perennial nest of ingenious murderers Messrs Morse and Lewis would have had to seek employment elsewhere (possibly Midsomer).

In my collection I see I also have:

  • Dorothy L Sayers’ Gaudy Night (of course, what a classic – also first published in 1935; though I do think that Agatha Christie would have told the story in half the length);
  • When Scholars Fall, by my former work colleague Timothy Robinson (1961);
  • Death at the President’s Lodging by Michael Innes (1936); and, still to be read,
  • Landscape with Dead Dons by the broadcaster Robert Robinson (1956).

My favourite fiction read in 2015 was Max Beerbohm’s preposterous Zuleika Dobson (1911) which, while not a whodunit, does involve mass violent death in Oxford on a scale that dwarfs all the corpses in Endeavour, Morse and Lewis put together. (I was fortunate enough to read an edition with the author’s own illustrations, which fit the story so well.)

You will know of others?

Escape to Perdition

24 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Books, Ed, Read Lately, Thrillers

≈ Leave a comment

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assassination, Czech, European Union, James Silvester, Slovak

Escape to Perdition book

Now, or in the near future, the Czech and Slovak Republics seem on the verge of reuniting. That’s the setting for Escape to Perdition, a recently published thriller by James Silvester. A party committed to reunification has come to power in Slovakia and its sister party in the Czech Republic seems about to do the same. But the European Union, in the form of its sinister Institute for European Harmony, has other ideas and is mounting a programme of assassination to prevent reunion. It prefers Central and Eastern Europe to be a collection of smaller, weaker states that it can control; it does not want a stronger, more assertive Czechoslovakia to set a trend that challenges that.

One of its assassins is the main character Peter Lowe, a hard-drinking, self-despising and blues-loving Englishman. In his career he has already accounted for one of the most famous names in Czechoslovak history, and now he has to take out the leaders of the pro-reunion parties. He kills the Czech leader – a man he admires, and a hero of the Prague Spring – in Týn church, the famous church with its twin towers that looms over the capital’s Old Town Square.   But then he falls in love with his next victim, the beautiful Miroslava Svobodova, since her election victory Prime Minister of Slovakia.

Election day in the Czech Republic approaches and events move quickly and violently. Among the characters we meet are Rasti, an ex-priest who runs the Smokin’ Hot, Peter’s favourite blues and drinking haunt; The Child, the Institute’s mysterious and deadly boss; Sir Roger McShade, the arrogant and suspect British Ambassador to Prague; Karol Černý, Ms Svobodova’s rival for the leadership of the new Czechoslovakia; and a range of murderers on the Institute’s payroll. Dramatic events unfold on (among other places) the Charles Bridge, in Old Town Square, in the Smetana Hall in Prague; at Lidice (the scene of a Nazi atrocity in WW2); and in the Tatra Mountains in Slovakia.

In the words of the trailer on Amazon, ‘Peter is not all he seems. Can he confront his past to save the future?’

For me it was a page-turner. It also contains occasional reflections on what has happened economically and politically in the Republics since 1989 and on the circumstances of their split in 1993. It’s the author’s debut novel.

The book is available through Urbane Publications, and costs £8-99 RRP in print and £1-99 as an e-book. ISBN 978-1-909273-79-5 See http://urbanepublications.com/books/escape-to-perdition/.

 

 

I Remember it Well – no chance

21 Monday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Tanya, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

forgetting, inspiration, Jilly Cooper

Your item will be delivered between 7am and 6pm, says the machine on the telephone. I have to stay at home all day waiting for the doorbell to ring. It’s an ideal opportunity to write a story.

I find myself tidying out the kitchen drawers instead.

Such is the contrariness of inspiration that it never strikes when you want it to, when you have a pen to hand or are sitting at your laptop and blessedly free from being interrupted. Instead it has a malicious habit of darting unexpectedly into your brain at the most inconvenient moment possible. An idea for a twist in a plot or another aspect of a character comes into your head while your nice neighbour is talking to you about the best time to cut the hedge. You try to pay attention but all the time your mind is drifting and you are worried that it’s showing on your face.

I once read – I hope I am not making this up – that Jilly Cooper used to rush into the ladies at parties to record funny scraps of conversation. That was in the bad old days before soft lavatory paper.

Provident writers carry a notebook around so that they can jot things down on the move – but you can guarantee that it’s when you forget to have it with you that a particularly splendid idea comes knocking.

Maybe the idea wasn’t so splendid after all. This is the only consolation on offer. For it’s not just the forgetting of the idea by the time you get home, but the dismal certainty that you’ll have forgotten you even had an idea in the first place.

Jingle bells…

21 Monday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie, Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Christmas shopping

(A telephone is ringing)

MAN: (Shouting up the stairs)  It’s Andrew! What do you want from them
for Christmas?

WOMAN: (Shouting down the stairs)  A scarf would be nice. Something floaty. A soft, pinky mauve…

MAN:  She wants a scarf. What? Oh, blue, I expect.

WOMAN: (Shouting down the stairs. Despairing) No, PINK…

MAN: (Fading towards garden) Did you see the match on Saturday…

 

 

Finding Treasure on the Net…

17 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Carly Watters, commercial fiction, Literary agents, literary fiction, upmarket fiction

Came across a great-sounding agent, with a really helpful website (she reminded me of Miss Snark, that legendary and anonymous New York agent).

Anyway – mustn’t blather on, as my old dad would have said – this is well-worth looking at. And our friends across the Atlantic might like to add her to their agent wish-list:

Carly Watters, Literary Agent
Voted one of 101 Best Websites for Writers by Writer’s Digest magazine.

She uses a clever system of pie-chart graphics to define the difference between literary fiction, upmarket fiction and commercial fiction – something I’ve always struggled with.

Happy Christmas, times nine…

16 Wednesday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Christmas lunch, writing resolutions

 

ninevoices Christmas 2015

Here are ninevoices (actually, eightvoices, plus Elizabeth, behind the camera) playing a silly game with numbered stickers and bells at our annual Christmas lunch. Wine had been taken…

But it wasn’t ALL frivolity. Our hostess (Elizabeth, again) made us all write our writing resolutions for 2016 on labels and hang them on a tiny artificial tree. They will be studied again next December and compared with what has actually been achieved. No pressure, then.

IMG_0684

HAPPY CHRISTMAS FROM NINEVOICES TO OUR FELLOW WRITERS!

 

Nobody said it was easy…

12 Saturday Dec 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie, Uncategorized, Writing

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Being a writer, Charles Dickens

…either being a writer, or living with one.

‘he shut himself away, doodled, looked out of the window, walked up and down, became ferociously impatient with his family, despaired, and then wrote.’

 

Dickens, by Peter Ackroyd

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