Queries, Comments and ComplaintsCorrespondence with L. J. Hurst |
Reviews and ReferencesAmazon.com's search inside allows one to identify where Hurst has been quoted, either as a source or as a reviewer. This misses Hurst's contribution to : The Arthur C. Clarke Award: A Critical Anthology, Edited by Paul Kincaid.
THE AUTHORSJust got the new Barrie Roberts Crowner and Justice out of the library and noticed on the back cover a quote from your review from Shots you did of an earlier title of his. I'm just waiting for a quote from one of my reviews in CADS to make it to a DW! 19 Nov 2002 Hi there. This is Nadia Lemmon, my husband is celebrity writer Don Lemmon from http://www.planetofthegods.com I'm writing to ask if you would you like to exchange website links? Please let me know what you decide and include your site details in your reply. Thanks for keeping sci-fi alive online! Sincerely, Nadia Lemmon Over 45,000,000 hits and counting since Nov. 1997 http://www.planetofthegods.com Planet Of The Gods - This could have been your typical good versus evil fantasy novel but it goes way deeper. If you are a Lord of the Rings or Star Wars fan... You'll become a Planet of the Gods fan overnight. February 2002 1. I have a new book out about the late science fantasy author A. E. van Vogt. 2. The title of my book is "A. E. van Vogt: Science Fantasy's Icon"(ISBN 1-59113-054-9) and is available in e-book and Print-On-Demand formats. 3. I notice on your web site a page titled "A. E. van Vogt on John W. Gallishaw's rules for Writing", a synopsis written by you from Charles Platt's book, "Who Writes Science Fiction." 4. My van Vogt book features information from several interviews which I had with van Vogt and at times, he had various things to say about his writing style. 5. Would you be interested in mentioning my book on your web site? 6. My book page address is: http://www.booklocker.com/bookpages/vogt.html 7. I will send more information, if you are interested. Sincerely, H. L. Drake September 2000 Heard the news? I've been signed by Pan Macmillan - three book contract. I promise not to torture anyone (Heh). All the best. ON CRIME FICTIONDate: Sun, 22 Nov 1998 16:57:40 +0000 From: L J Hurst > Subject: First crime - from a British pov > When I was eight or nine (in the mid-60s) I was reading novels about a cat and dog detective pair - the cat was Mr Twink and the dog was Sergeant Boffer (as the names suggest it was a Holmes and Watson relationship). Sergeant Boffer was owned by the local policeman and therefore felt he should police the local animal community. I remember vaguely that weasels were behind some of the crimes they investigated. Robert Hooper wrote:
I found the following e-mail recently on a bulletin board and wondered if you ever got an answer in case you didn't I've included some details on the Mr Twink series which you may find interesting I myself grew up with my mother reading Mr Twink books to me and that helped instill a love of reading in me. I always wanted to read others in the series but we could never find them. I have since learnt that there was only ever 1 edition of the books in hardback published by Epworth Press in the early 1960's this had made them very scarce and hard to come by, but I am still trying to get a complete set although this is proving a long task and quite expensive. There was also a paperback edition published by Koala Books - itself owned by Epworth Press - (I only found out about these last week) so they may well be rarer these days than the hardbacks. The books were written by Freda Hurt a noted children's author of the time (i haven't read any of her other works). There were 9 books in the series Clever Mr Twink Mr Twink Takes Charge Mr Twink Finds Out Mr Twink, Detective Mr Twink & the Kitten Mystery Mr Twink & the Pirates Mr Twink & the Jungle Garden (this is supposed to be the rarest and hardest to find) Mr Twink Finds a Family Mr Twink & the Cat Thief
Does anyone know of a source that can give me a list of the books written by John Creasey with the date written and the main character (i.e. Roger West, etc.) Allen J Hubin's CRIME FICTION: A COMPREHENSIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY (Garland: NY) will give you all the facts. Hubin is the place to start for most authors. He had published 3 editions now of this seminal work.
I well remember the Man in Black series which carried on for some time after he war. Valentine Dyall was the eponymous hero.
The Man in Black series was called Appointment With Fear on the BBC, and the scripts were used in the USA in a series called Suspense. They were all written by John Dickson Carr, the Locked Room specialist. I have had a boxed set of tapes of Suspense for several years and still have got around to listening to them.
THE BOOKSOn George Orwell's 1984 - April 2000 Hi i am an english 12 stydent looking for ideas to write on about george orwell and 1984. could you give me a few ideas/possibilities to write on. thank you very much One thing in NINETEEN EIGHTY FOUR that you might like to write about is to list all the things that George Orwell knew would be invented, or would become much more important than they were in his time. He finished the novel in 1947, but it includes things such as interactive television (Winston watches an exercise program on breakfast TV, and they are atching him, too); closed-circuit television; word-processors at work; and voice recognition software for the computer on which he writes his newspaper stories. Orwell had worked in the BBC during World War Two but he had never seen television (though he knew about it), and he had never seen a computer - but he knew that they were coming and that they could be mis-used. I don't think there is anything like the internet in NINETEEN EIGHTY FOUR, but look at something else which has become important while you have been at school. When Winston is in the canteen they are given artificial food to eat - his colleague thinks it is good thing but Winston is not so sure. This means that Orwell also foresaw that there would be a dialogue (or dialog) about these things. The food example is very close to the current debates about Genetically Modified food.
I can't give you much more help, but I hope this starts you thinking.
this is a relly cool web page and it helped me alot. If you have any more information on H.G. Wells could you send it to me. If you have reports i would like to see them please.
Everything I have on Wells is on my home page, I'm afraid. But I have just searched http://www.metacrawler.com which brings up some interesting sites: http://home.olemiss.edu/~egcash/wells.html http://www.clarndon.demon.co.uk/wells.htm And there are others. On H G Wells and the Second World War - April 2000 I was interested in your page concerning H.G.Wells. and have decided to make comment to that page. We all perceive things first hand and are dependent on the knowledge we have acquired as we grow. Thus the out look and image we shape in our unique mind can never be the same. this makes reading and thought very unique. reading and the nature of radio make for a very exiting experience. A vista is built into the mind and imagination fed not through visual stimuli, but through ideas from spoken words and sounds. The brain is then only able to use data received, then forcing it to bring out images and ideas from sounds and any dormant thoughts. Wells wrote a pamphlet called The Common Sense of War and Peace,a penguin booklett. This produced in the period leading up to the outbreak of world war two, it is quite interesting. He makes comment on the concentration camps, Nazis etc are known by other words. In a number of pages the reader would be fooled into thinking he had written the booklet to day. He condemns the action world governments and business are inflicting on the planet and warns of it's consequences. Such Ideas you would think out of place for the time that H.G.Wells had been writing. I will never Know for sure if the meanings I read from his writings are correct at all?
Much of Wells's late material is difficult to obtain (though I do have a copy of another of his WW2 Penguin publications CRUX ANSATA in which he calls for the bombing of Rome - which the Allies had been avoiding because of the presence of the Pope). I do know though that George Orwell felt that Wells was old and tired, even before the publication of "Mind at the end of its tether", but Wells's earlier writings had introduced many young people to ideas beyond this world, including the young Orwell, for which Orwell felt forever indebted.
The Bodkin association is probably my own, but Ballard is so well read that the connection could not have escaped him.
What your essay should include is something like the following: EMPIRE OF THE SUN describes the life of British middle-class expatriats in Shanghai from 1941 to 1945. Although they were living in China these people were still living an essentially British life with many advantages such as wealth, servants etc. They did not mix with the Chinese socially. China was theoretically a republic then, and the British were members of the British empire. The Japanese had invaded large parts of China in the 1930s but they did not occupy and imprison the civilians until war broke out with the Americans after the attach on Pearl Harbour in December 1941. Japan was an Empire and its symbol is the sun - it is sometimes called the Land of the Rising Sun. So literally Jim the boy hero of the book and all the Europeans become prisoners of the EMPIRE OF THE SUN. The had lost the benefits of the British empire. Although he is a prisoner Jim does not hate his captors - he rather admires the spirit of the Japanese officers and guards. So, metaphorically, the centre of his universe changes, the old centre had been British/European values - they become more centered on the Japanese. So a bit of his mind becomes occupied by this "Empire of the Sun". But he does not give way completely, and he admires the Americans when they arrive at the end of the war. Jim's parents and the other adults keep their original British imperial mind-set. Finally, consider the geography. Shanghai was hot and tropical and not like Britain. In Jim's world it was full of big houses and swimming pools; but beyond them were rice paddy fields and starving Chinese. Then the swimming pools were drained as the Japanese arrived, and Jim's residence became the camp. So the Empire of the Sun, geographically, was this changing physical world of different residences.
Hope this helps. Do try to re-read the book, you'll find a lot in it a second time.
I enjoyed your home page very much. I enjoyed and have put to use your critique of Charles Todd's work. As with Mr. Todd, I am an American writing a murder mystery which is set during the Blitz and I found your critique most helpful. I have been reading British authored detective fiction written during WW II as background research and your bibliography was most helpful for that endeavor as well.
An interesting comparison with Charles Todd's Test of Wills has just been published - Rennie Airth's River of Darkness, set in the same period. Airth is British and culturally makes fewer mistakes, but even he is not exempt. I will sit down with River of Darkness soon, I hope, and do another report, though the worst example I have found is the phrase "ploughman's lunch" used for a meal of bread and cheese. This phrase is now so common in Britain that almost no one seems to realise that it was invented in the 1960s.
Re Charles Todd's A Test of Wills: I'm not particularly favourable to most of those American spellings you pointed out in this book either, but I'm not so sure about "plow". I've heard that both "plow" and "plough" were current in 18th-century England; but the former eventually became the standard spelling for the US apparently, while the latter did on this side of the Atlantic. I've noticed that the King James Bible uses "plow" (as well as some other archaic English spellings such as "shew" and "publickly"), so perhaps there is some truth in this.
Thanks for your comments. I think the significant thing is that an educated man such as Todd's protagonist would have used "plough", not "plow" as that would have been regarded as an Americanism or an illiteracy by someone of the car owning classes in 1920.
These could be the 'Uncle' books that I too have read and L J Hurst (who runs our Cafe Phil page - which is actually on his website) collects. Did Uncle live in a very, very, very large castle (needing railway trips to get to the other side of it?) and did the stories have a wonderfully bizarre and surreal side to them? If so its the same books. They are out of print but do turn up and have a loyal and somewhat fanatical following.
These are the Uncle books by J. P. Martin, published by Jonathan Cape, and illustrated by Quentin Blake as you say. I believe that they were never published in paperback.
I'm only a reader (and collector) myself so I don't have any special sources. Later on this year the monthly bookfairs at the Buxton Pailion (telephone them for dates) will start again. You could try visiting to leave your wants list with the specialist children's dealers, as I have never found a copy on a dealer's open shelves. Authors who admired Martin's work include Richard Ingrams and Neil Gaiman. ** Your query has driven me to try to consolidate my knowledge and I have been researching J. P. Martin's Uncle books via the internet. This is the result of my search.
There were some paperback editions, but I am not sure I have a complete list: Uncle was published in paperback by NEL, and Uncle Cleans Up by Sparrow. There is a web-site run by the fantasy authors Diane Duane and her husband, dedicated to Uncle here. This includes the good news that Random House (which now owns the Cape imprint) will be re-printing the first two volumes in one paperback omnibus later this year, and the others later if the first volume is a success. But that does mean that the two least available volumes will appear last, if at all. The web-site WWW.ABEBOOKS.COM (the advanced book exchange) showed two British secondhand booksellers with copies - but one was a first edition in good condition at 150 pounds, and the other had a paperback copy of Uncle at eight pounds. Unfortunately that had gone when I telephoned. But it looks worthwhile keeping an eye on ABE. (The prices of the US editions are just out of this world). What is slightly unusual, perhaps, is that fans of Quentin Blake are not demanding the reprinting of these books with his fantastic illustrations running across the pages. Nevertheless, welcome to a club that is not as small as I once imagined.
I'm sorry this is rather negative.
THE FACTS> My name is A..... M....., and I am doing a research paper on Capital Punishment in Britain in the 1930s. I would very much like to cite your work. Perchance, could you tell me the latest date it was updated. I would greatly appreciate it.
Dear Ms M.....,
Thanks for your interest. I would have posted the article on the Death Penalty in Britain on June 28th 2001 (there was a slightly shorter version a month or two before). It's a long story, but suffice it to say that I am at present in the middle of a long argument with my son about the darned bomb they used... Someone (a third party) referred to it as a 'rolling bomb' and I said that EVERYone knows that it was a 'bouncing bomb'... You wouldn't believe the argument that has ensued! Gauntlets have been thrown in the shape of URLs which supposedly tell the story - you wouldn't believe some of the claims! - and we're at the point now where neither of us believes anything, any longer... I tried a search on 'British Air Ministry' but I can't find anything which gives anything definitive about the raid. Your notes on the movie contain some good points - they've set me to thinking differently about some aspects of the movie, which my husband and I have just finished watching, in an attempt to settle the argument, but, when you get right down to it, the movie is as about as useful for solid information as some of the webpages I've been reading about the Squadron... A point, though: I agree about the 'lonesomeness' of the main characters and the sparseness of plot, etc., but I wonder if this is merely hindsight from a more affluent age? I believe this was made about ten years after the war - how much money would be spared from re-building of the country to allow for fripperies like movie-making? Any help you may be able to offer would be very much appreciated, and I thank you for taking the time to read this. Cheers from an expatriated Brit - from the Bristol area, where Barnes Wallis worked at one time.
I have been looking for Dam Busters material on the net myself (I wanted to steal a picture of a Lancaster) but have not found much.
THE SITE> > I know that it may be ignorant but I disregarded what you had to say about the Turner Diaries mostly due to the fact that the problems that are going on with our nation right now and I say right now are problems that are associated with people that are racist against our country although our involvement with Israel has gotten us in all of this mess the way that we are being treated as Americans is the same crap that this book teaches and the same ideology as mentally challenged leaders has taught. Where in the bible does it say all of this rationality? find it I would like to know. Before anyone writes a book they should do some research and know what they are talking about. Hate is not an answer, Hate is not taught by GOD. What do you think Jesus was about anyway??? I would like to know what you think. I will be waiting. Again sorry for not reading your home page I am just so disgusted with who people believe GOD is hateful and it makes me wonder where this is all coming from???
Dear C... D.....,
Thank you for your message.
I can see that you are very concerned about matters, but I am rather confused about your reading of my review of THE TURNER DIARIES. Anyway, John Sutherland, whom I quote in my review, has now reported that William Pierce, the author, died in July. Presumably Pierce is now being judged as he was not judged on Earth. Contra ... I disagree with almost everything you've written here, you... you philistine. (August 2000) Red text on a blacj background. Not the best of choices. (September 1997) On the Other Hand - January 2000 I would like to submit my zine link to your cool directory. The name of the zine is Wet Devoh: The "not-so-punk" Punk Fanzine. Thanks, Seth
Very Flash, I particularly like the starry background and the animations.
We think your page is very cooooooooooool.
What a wonder site, so visual! My is so drab, but then I'm just trying to
get rid of books.
I've paid you a visit. Must say that at first sight it looks pretty impressive. I will go and have a read of some of the material on offer.
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© L J Hurst 2007