A Night on the Town by Jan Needle
Weird thing being a writer, I've always
thought. Two things have happened in the last couple of days that made me think
of synchronicity (among other things). Firstly, out of the blue, a comment
popped into my inbox about Wild Wood, my comic subversion of Mr Grahame's
mighty masterpiece. It was appended to a review in Awfully Big Blog Adventure
from last April, by a man I don't know. Easiest thing to do is to reproduce it:
BRIAN BERKE
said...
On January 1st, 2015 I
decided to reread The Wind in the Willows sixty years after first having it
read in class at school and then reading it myself. Later, and by chance I
decided to see if any books with the work of William Rushton were available on
ebay. What a joy to find Wild Wood. It compliments 'The Willows' wonderfully,
and it was published to encourage children to read!
That was good enough in itself, but the
synchronicity comes in this wise: the same morning, I trundled down from
Manchester to Oxford – with the middle section done by bus – to Dennis Hamley’s
relaunch of his marvellous story Spirit of the Place, where I purchased number
nine of a limited edition of 100.
'Marvellous story,' I hear you say – 'but
isn't Jan an old mucker, who undoubtedly got a comfy bed for the night for his
pains – he would say that, wouldn't he!' But it wasn't me what said it, honest
guv, it was Philip Pullman. I'll quote
him, too, from the back cover of this lovely volume:
'It's
a marvellous story, put together with great ingenuity. Dennis Hamley seems to
have got right inside the eighteenth-century (one of my own favourite places to
visit), heroic couplets and all. It made me want to go out at once and build a
Grotto in the garden.'
Third part of the synchronicity is even
odder. My dear departed friend Jan Mark loved Wild Wood dearly, and told me
that she wished she'd written it herself. She was also a friend of both Dennis
and Philip, naturally – if only because they were/are all part of what a cynic
might call the Oxford Mafia. And while I didn't know he'd be at the launch, for
some reason I slipped a copy into my bag, with
some inchoate thought of Jan swirling around the back of my mind.
Lo and behold, the man was there, we
exchanged hellos and pleasantries and had the age-old conversation 'what are
you working on now?', and he accepted my copy with apparent pleasure. I felt
Jan’s ghost approvingly at my shoulder. (As approvingly as she ever was, that
is – through the cigarette smoke!) It was a good part of an extremely pleasant
night.
Then back to Dennis and Kay's flat with
another Oxford friend of theirs called Robert Lipscombe, writer of the fascinating The English Project, and we
fell to talking politics and history. Well you do, don't you? And the subject
of Napoleon came up, because I've just finished writing a novella about that extraordinary genius, despot and sex-bomb!
Just because I can't think of any other way
to round this off, I'm going to give you one more quote, which is the sort of
preface to the book, which is (sort of) called Napoleon – The Escape. It's not
just us who live in fascinating times…
"St. Helena! The very idea fills
me with horror. To be relegated for life to an island within the tropics, at a
vast distance from any continent, cut off from all communication with the
world, and from all that it holds that is dear to my heart. That is worse than
the iron cage of Tamerlane."
The Emperor Napoleon was possibly the greatest
general who ever lived – even the Duke of Wellington insisted on that – so it
was imperative he should never go free again when he was finally imprisoned.
With consummate cruelty, the British exiled him to a tiny volcanic outcrop 1200
miles from the nearest land, to rot his life away. But Napoleon, like many a
dictator before and since, was revered almost as a god. Before he even reached
St Helena in 1815 his ship Bellerophon was harried by a privateer, and rescue
plots were being hatched in several countries. His brother Joseph, now living
in America, pledged thirty million francs to set him free, and when the Times
announced he had escaped, dancing was reported in the streets of London. The
French Revolution had, after all, found a popular new use for lamp-posts –
hanging aristocrats.
Strangest of all, given England’s official
hatred for him, great men and patriots flocked to the cause. Lord Cochrane, the
brilliant frigate captain known as the Sea Wolf (and model for Jack Aubrey in
the O’Brien books) joined forces with the dictator of Peru to spring Napoleon
to found a new Empire of South America, while innovators and men of science
were keen to help as well. Robert Fulton, builder of the world’s first working
submarine, collaborated with an Irishman called Tom Johnson, who aimed to pluck
Napoleon from the island and spirit him away beneath the Atlantic waves. The
dictator, whose wife had point-blank refused to share his exile, would leave an
unknown number of illegitimate children behind.
Life on the island was a hotbed of treachery and intrigue. One of the dictator’s mistresses was the wife of the Marquis de Montholon, who had been appointed by France to look after Napoleon’s welfare. His personal physician, an Irishman called O’Meara, might very well have poisoned him with arsenic. The governor, Sir Hudson Lowe, hated him so passionately he finally refused to meet or talk to him, and when Napoleon was thought to have died, refused to mark his grave. Although he insisted, naturally, that the body in it was indeed Napoleon’s.
The truth of that has never been confirmed. But
when the grave beside it – which was meant to contain the bones of his servant
Jean-Baptiste Cipriani – was opened some years later, it was empty. And
Cipriani, incidentally, was a man reputed to be Napoleon’s double. Or even,
possibly, his half-brother.
You
couldn’t make it up, could you?
Synchronicity PS. Main drain blocked. Too deep for man with short arms and wrist injury. One of my many long-armed sons turns up from London and 'volunteers' to go headfirst into the sewer. Job done! Thanks Matti...
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Spirit-Place-Dennis-Hamley-ebook/dp/B00DJSR05I
http://awfullybigreviews.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/wild-wood-by-jan-needle-illustrated-by.html?showComment=1426266513120
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=the+english+project+robert+lipscombe
Synchronicity PS. Main drain blocked. Too deep for man with short arms and wrist injury. One of my many long-armed sons turns up from London and 'volunteers' to go headfirst into the sewer. Job done! Thanks Matti...
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Spirit-Place-Dennis-Hamley-ebook/dp/B00DJSR05I
http://awfullybigreviews.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/wild-wood-by-jan-needle-illustrated-by.html?showComment=1426266513120
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=the+english+project+robert+lipscombe
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