Christopher Fowler's Blog, page 58

December 9, 2019

Judgement On Nuremberg

London is simply too eerily blue-skied and sunny at the moment, so we hied ourselves off to visit friends in Nuremberg at the weekend. Bavaria’s second city was snowless but not exactly Christmas-free, with seven Christmas markets, too many Bavarian sausages and too muchGlühwein available on every corner. Our charming friends live in an elegant […]
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Published on December 09, 2019 03:05

December 7, 2019

The British Bee Hive

I first became properly aware of this image when I saw it used as an enormous front-cloth in ‘Sweeney Todd’ on Broadway. George Cruikshank’s etching was designed in 1840 and was brought up to date by him in 1867. I’d like to have included a much larger image but it’s readily available online. The political […]
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Published on December 07, 2019 02:47

December 6, 2019

The Friday Song

To commemorate Mr Trump visiting London with a thousand armed minders making sure that protesters couldn’t reach him, I thought we’d have a little number dedicated to the NRA. NB Not intended as a comment on US foreign policy.
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Published on December 06, 2019 03:43

December 5, 2019

How Popular Cinema Could Be Popular Again

Cinema was always called the populist medium. Generations of young audiences grew up with Bambi and Batman, Tarzan and Terminator, then went on to the world of Marvel superheroes, cheerfully unaware that these stories stemmed from comics dating back to the 1960s. Hollywood is going through one of its periodic growing pains. Its domestic revenue […]
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Published on December 05, 2019 00:13

December 3, 2019

The Obsession That Wrecks Writers

My English teacher told me: ‘Specialise. Nobody likes a good all-rounder.’Of course I was filled with youthful stupidity and ignored him, wasting years trying to please everyone instead of myself. During this time I had ample opportunity to study other writers and quickly identified an odd group. Instead of talking about the craft they obsessed […]
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Published on December 03, 2019 23:14

December 2, 2019

What I’m Reading In December 2

The rest of my bedside table stack comprises; ‘Crime Fiction: A Reader’s Guide’ by the ever-dependable Barry Forshaw. From anyone else a book that’s essentially a collection of suggestions for crime readers might not pass muster, but in Mr Forshaw’s hands it becomes an expert’s check-list of essential must-reads. ‘Operation Mincemeat’ by Ben Macintyre delves […]
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Published on December 02, 2019 23:45

December 1, 2019

What I’m Reading In December

As the papers fill with ‘Best Of’ lists we’re being presented with all sorts of interesting books for the winter months, plus some not-very-well-hidden PR promotions. Bookshops charge for table space and listings magazine charge for entries, so to counteract these here’s a selection from my current reading pile, my only agenda being enjoyment and/or […]
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Published on December 01, 2019 23:19

The Finest Christmas Views

Yesterday morning London was filled with dense violet fog. Only later in the day did the dome of St Paul’s loom out, followed by the spire of the Shard. There are always a few days in November when London feels correctly autumnal, just as Christmas in the capital tends to arrive in January. Every year […]
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Published on December 01, 2019 00:53

November 29, 2019

Ageism Is An Old Idea

My crime books deliberately use elderly leading characters, which leads to quite a lot of debate with readers. Somebody said to me recently, ‘We really look after older people here – there are care homes everywhere.’ I was horrified by her casual acceptance of the idea that the best thing to do with older people […]
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Published on November 29, 2019 23:24

November 28, 2019

The Return Of The Friday Song

It’s about time we reinstated this occasional end-of-the-week knees-up. When I think of all the truly weird films I’ve seen, Leo Carax’s ‘Holy Motors’ is one about which I remember almost nothing at all…except for the intermission. Dennis Lavant remains a truly committed actor (who probably should be committed). For me Carax’s best film remains […]
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Published on November 28, 2019 23:47

Christopher Fowler's Blog

Christopher Fowler
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