Christopher Fowler's Blog, page 139

June 2, 2017

What’s On The Other Side?

  If you are of a certain age, the lineup of Peter Purves, John Noakes and Valerie Singleton will mean only one thing – Blue Peter, the impossibly wholesome Make ‘n’ Do children’s TV show – the longest-running in the world (it started in 1958 and is still going.) These are the only things anyone […]
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Published on June 02, 2017 00:04

June 1, 2017

Acting Your Age

One of the UK’s leading social scientists has suggested that people should not be called old until they are seriously frail, dependent and approaching death. This is not because of any notion of political correctness, but because these days people in their 60s and possibly 70s and 80s can still be considered active adults, with many […]
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Published on June 01, 2017 23:59

May 31, 2017

London – City Of Excess

When you think about excessive or decadent cities you tend to think of Berlin, but either I’m doing Berlin wrong or it’s nowhere near as excessive as London, a city which Frank Harris described as like a bedraggled woman you turn from in disgust, only to discover she has undreamed-of depths. London’s allure is paradoxically […]
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Published on May 31, 2017 01:39

May 29, 2017

Why ‘1984’ Got It All Wrong

At school I became obsessed with US politics, and now the obsession has returned. As someone who grew up with the relatively fair-play concepts behind soft-spoken British manoeuvrings, the idea that a leader entrusted with the nation’s voice could be impeached for burglary and lying about it seemed surreal. Nixon proved the tip of an […]
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Published on May 29, 2017 22:41

May 28, 2017

How A Pulp Writer Helped Win The War

I’m still researching, peering into the years following the Second World War (it may lead nowhere, but that’s the peril of finding a subject to write about). National defence was very different then. Stories emerge that still defy belief, of fake villages being built as bomb targets and fishermen’s wives knitting sea-mine nets. Coupled with […]
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Published on May 28, 2017 23:15

May 27, 2017

49 Bankside: A Place In History

It often seems to me that despite its great age, London has few old ‘ordinary’ houses; only the grand mansions survive. We want history to be about paupers and prostitutes,  or kings and crowns. What about those in the middle? The London author and historian Gillian Tindall is concerned with ordinary people, and their lives […]
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Published on May 27, 2017 22:49

If You Don’t Trust Shakespeare, Don’t Do It

Emma Rice, a fine, innovative director, became the Globe director who started the rumpus – she famously stated that Shakespeare was like medicine, and wanted to modernise a theatre most famous for being a replica of the original. It was a bad fit; she went on to direct a ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ that did indeed […]
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Published on May 27, 2017 13:58

May 25, 2017

The Disreputable W1!

So, you’re at a grand party in a Park Lane mansion and get a bit tipsy. Seducing a beautiful woman, you tiptoe to a bedroom with her. In the morning, by way of thanks, you send her a diamond. Unfortunately it turns out to be one of the German Crown Jewels, which are not yours […]
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Published on May 25, 2017 12:03

What Publishers Get Up To Behind Closed Doors

They hold meetings, of course – but usually they don’t include the people who drive their business, the authors. Not so Quercus, whose annual sales conference I’ve just attended at London’s Cafe de Paris – they believe in involving their authors heavily throughout the publishing process, and in doing so seem to be quietly revolutionising […]
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Published on May 25, 2017 00:21

May 24, 2017

When Movies Reflect Politics

Are American films really any worse now than they used to be? Is the idea of ‘Transformers 7’ being nominated for an Oscar any crazier than ‘Dr Dolittle’ making the Best Picture list four decades earlier? It’s tempting to name a year and suggest that before such-and-such a point movies were better. There have been […]
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Published on May 24, 2017 08:22

Christopher Fowler's Blog

Christopher Fowler
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