On the bandwagon by Jan Needle
Huge jollities over poor old Rudy.
The weekend when Endeavour Books put Death Order up for free, the Independent
did a huge story headlined Adolf Hitler's
Nazi deputy Rudolf Hess ‘murdered by British agents’ to stop him spilling
wartime secrets - which is the
nub of the novel.
Within hours the
Daily Mail had lifted the Indy’s story, and fully credited their source, which
in modern journalism terms might be something of a first! They also added a
further twist: Nazi Rudolf Hess was 'murdered by British
agents in prison to stop him revealing war secrets but Scotland Yard was told
NOT to investigate'
Both papers
named the Scotland Yard detective who undertook the enquiries – Detective Chief
Superintendent Howard Jones – and also revealed that his investigation had been
abruptly terminated on the orders of the DPP! They also named the British Army
surgeon, Dr Hugh Thomas, who said the medical evidence proved that the prisoner
who died in Spandau could not have been Hess.
In 1918, as an
infantryman, a rifle bullet had passed through his lung from front to back. But
Thomas revealed that the inevitable scars on the man’s torso did not in fact
exist.
Germany, where the
Nazis are still a source of shame and pain, were not long behind. The
English-language internet news source The Local discovered a completely new
angle. They reported:
The
personal files of Rudolf Hess – Hitler’s right-hand man who flew to Britain in
1941 to attempt to end the war with a peace treaty – are going up for auction
in the US. They could shed light on one of World War II's more mysterious
events.
This story, if true, is strange indeed. The
papers were generally thought to have been lost to posterity many years ago.
Like the British files, they will almost certainly have been heavily redacted if
they do ever see the light of day.
The Lancashire
Magazine took a robustly local line, with the heading MANCHESTER AUTHOR SCOOPS
SCOTLAND YARD. Their piece was written by my friend and colleague Andrew
Rosthorn, who has been investigating the Hess conundrum for many years.
Characteristically generous, for if anyone scooped anyone, it was Andrew
himself, not me.
Another friend
who has been in on the tale for several years, Bernhard Mueller, is now well
into translating the book into German. Be interesting to see what they make of
it…
Anyway – as they
say – life goes on, and another bonus of throwing in my lot with an ebook
publisher rather than work my poor son Matti Gardner’s fingers to the bone is
that they wanted me to write a sea book, as well. They knew of my novels based
around the life and times of William Bentley, and when I told them they would
be coming out soon anyway, asked for a novella, as a sort of ‘tie-in and
taster.’
That struck me
as a fantastic idea, so I threw myself into the fray. The result was a thirty
thousand worder called The Devil’s Luck, which introduces Bentley’s extremely
dangerous and unpleasant uncle, Daniel Swift, as a midshipman in his early
twenties.
Among other
things, the book limns in the way in which his later character became set. And
gave me the chance to meet and develop some other characters, including one I
fell in love with instantly, called Charlie Raven – or Craven Raven as he is
cruelly dubbed by the captain of the Pointer.
I can’t tell you
how much I enjoyed writing it, and it will be up on Amazon very shortly. I’ll
announce it on Facebook and Kindle.
And in a way, it
was all down to Herr Hess. Strange, isn’t it?
Comments
what's more, dennis, on the back of the devil's luck, they've asked me if i'd like to write a series of novellas about nelson hisself! what a fabulous idea! i might have to give up beer drinking and folk music for a while. or then again, maybe not...
one thing is getting surer all the time. throwing in my lot with authors electric and the ebook world have been a wonderful move. better than popping ganglions!
But DON'T give anything up when you're writing. Golden rule.