Nick Spill's Blog, page 8

March 27, 2016

Bob Adelman on Men In Blazers show silent homage

Bob Adelman10/30/1930 - 3/19/2016

Who placed a photo of Bob Adelman on NBCSN's Men in Blazers show?
Bob was my next door neighbor since he moved to Miami Beach from New York. He wrote the most thoughtful inscriptions on his books that he gave to Joy and me. He idolized Joy. He was always considerate and talkative. Getting out of my car after work he would be on his bicycle and stop and engage me in a wide ranging conversation that would never end. I miss these conversations.

We took our grand kids to the opening of "The Movement" exhibition at the NSU Art Museum in Ft Lauderdale and they were blown away by his photos. They had been studying the Civil Rights Movement at school and were thrilled when Bob took time to talk to them. They poured over every one of his photos.

He encouraged me to keep writing - in fact he insisted I start writing my first book The Way of the Bodyguard and was thrilled when it came out.

I had been playing phone tag with him the last two weeks as I wanted to give him a copy of my new novel The Jaded Kiwi. Our book shelves are full of the books he published.

We held vigil for him last Saturday when we found out he had died in his house, across the street.

So there is one mystery unsolved. Who placed a photo of him at the back of the Men in Blazers set that was shown on NBCSN last Monday?

For those who do not follow English soccer, Men in Blazers in the funniest most erudite and entertaining sports commentary show on TV.

When I recently asked Bob about this photo he said he walked backwards all the way to Selma.


Bob, we miss you and pay homage to you, your determination, guts and great eye for some of the most compelling images ever captured.
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Published on March 27, 2016 12:45

February 29, 2016

The Jaded Kiwi - one sick twisted crime story




















The Jaded Kiwi is now available on Amazon. A twisted crime tale set in New Zealand in 1976 at the start of the War on Drugs and two couples who try to make sense of events that are out of control.
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Published on February 29, 2016 21:23

February 13, 2016

Search and Seizure of New Zealand Marijuana and the start of the War on Drugs

Search and Seizure of New Zealand Marijuana and the start of the War on Drugs  Huey helicopter at Evergreen Aviation Museum, Oregon My new novel The Jaded Kiwi opens with a Huey helicopter carrying a net full of seeded marijuana plants over a forest in New Zealand. This sets the stage for a bumper harvest of wild marijuana plants the following year amidst a severe marijuana drought in the summer of 1976 in Auckland. For the record, there was a marijuana drought last year as well.
Two couples, a gynecologist and a physicist together with a violinist and an actress meet by accident in a pub and help a charismatic Maori activist evade the police.
A group of Maori plans to deliver a truckload of cannabis to Auckland.
A Chinese family has harvested four greenhouses of enhanced sensimilla.
A criminal mastermind plots to start a drug war.
A police Inspector tries to find a fugitive Maori and solve a mysterious murder and abduction.
The War on Drugs in New Zealand starts to go terribly wrong.
The Jaded Kiwi is being released March 1st in paperback and e-book.


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Published on February 13, 2016 10:44

January 24, 2016

The Jaded Kiwi available for pre order on Amazon

The Jaded Kiwi is now available for pre-order. Both the paperback and e-book will be available on March 1. You can pre-order the e-book here.

Two couples, a kung fu happy gynecologist and theoretical physicist meet a classical violinist and an actress in a pub in Ponsonby one Friday night. They stumble upon a Maori activist and help him escape a Police dragnet only to become engulfed in a series of conspiracies beyond their control. There is a false flag kidnapping, the sickest torture scene with a lawnmower ever written and a disturbing rape scene. A cockney criminal mastermind and a creative Police inspector stalk each other and start what becomes the war against drugs in New Zealand.

Set in 1976 Auckland, New Zealand over 10 days, this is a love story and a twisted crime mystery with intense action sequences. Available on Amazon here.
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Published on January 24, 2016 07:34

January 21, 2016

My first boss Pat Day 1923 - 2016

self portrait from 1948Melvin Day died on January 17th, 2016 in New Zealand. He was my first boss. He had been the Director of the National Art Gallery in Wellington, New Zealand and the first Kiwi to graduate from the Courtauld Institute of Art in London.

When I first arrived as Exhibitions Curator at the Gallery I discovered a "School of Poussin" painting, uncatalogued and hidden away having been a victim of a botched restoration. I informed my new boss who suggested I write to his old friend Anthony Blount. I sent the Queen's curator a color slide of the painting and a description. Blount wrote back that the slide was too small and we should send an 8 x 10 print. (And he was trained by the KGB!) He promptly identified the painting and referred us to an old Burlington magazine where we were able to ascribe its provenance and real title. A few years later Anthony Blount was identified as a Russian Spy and part of the Cambridge Five or Six, depending on how well you can count.

In an article I wrote for a catalog of Conceptual Art at the Christchurch Art Gallery in 2000, The Art of the Heist, I referred to Pat as he gave his blessing for our stint as curators for the National Students Art Festival. 

"Our Director, Melvin Day ... liked to be called Pat and our job was to make him look good while also challenging just about everything he stood for. Pat was a solid Art History scholar, a product of the Courtauld Institute of Art at the University of London and a relic of a wonderful but bygone era; the gentleman art history scholar who wore perfect hand tied bowties and told charming and witty anecdotes. In the tiny but brutally politicized world of art politics in Wellington, he was ill served by his many masters, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Academy of Fine Arts and the NAG Council. He also, and this is where I really sympathize with him, had to deal with us, Andrew and Nick, the terrible duo."

With the many exhibitions we staged and the increase in attendance at the National Art Gallery, I like to think we made him look good. There was not a bad bone in Pat's body and he was a perfect gentleman with his conviviality, scholarship and decency.

When I finally had the grand opening of  a new traveling show I had curated "Three Contemporary Maori Artists" that had taken a long time to organize and involved speaking on many Maraes around the country, Pat received huge accolades for the show. I recall standing to one side and witnessing every VIP patting him on the back and praising him for the exhibition. He deserved it. (More on this show and how it relates to The Jaded Kiwi in a later post.)

Pat Day, after he left the National Art Gallery, went on to continue exploring his painting as well as his art history research. He received the recognition he deserved and I regret I never got to see him again. He was a great boss. 


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Published on January 21, 2016 18:45

January 16, 2016

THE JADED KIWI proofs arrive

Usually writers post their newly arrived proofs next to their smiling faces.
My cat was too excited about my new novel, The Jaded Kiwi, due to be released March 1.
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Published on January 16, 2016 10:36

January 2, 2016

One of the best films of 2015 THE DEADLANDS

The Dead Lands
The Dead Lands, released on DVD, is an instant classic that can be compared to Akira Kurosawa’s “Seven Samurai”. It is also a challenging film for its portrayal of violence and the warrior code. Maori warriors and samurai venerate their ancestors, believe in honorable death through combat and have sophisticated and deep beliefs. This action packed film is both extremely violent and deeply mystical. The plot points keep changing and the dialogue embraces a Shakespearean majesty that elevates the ensuring story and its inevitable bloodbath.
Set in “pre-contact” times, before Europeans arrived, the film is spoken in Maori with English subtitles. Every detail looks authentic from the elaborate vocabulary, the style of dress and weaponry to the cosmological beliefs Maori lived by. The filmmakers are the first to admit they created an imagined world, as we do not know how Maori looked or acted in the 16th century. Although early European artists clearly articulated certain aspects of Maori, including their hand to hand combat weapons.

Maori close combat tools, war clubs drawn by John Frederick Miller, 1769-1770.
John Frederick Miller drew various types of Maori war clubs after Captain Cook’s voyage to New Zealand in 1769-1770, made from wood, stone and pounamu (greenstone). Most violent encounters involved close quarter fighting with such weapons. Maori had no access to metals before the coming of Europeans. Maori had a highly evolved form of martial arts developed in isolation. Such fighting style was similar in concept to Bram Frank’s edged weapon techniques and Filipino blade fighting that demonstrate the universality of proven methods. The warriors who triumph went on to teach another generation of their successful ways. It’s a fighting style that works. There are no fake martial arts schools. You either can fight effectively or you die in battle.
The previews make the film look extremely violent. But the resulting shape of the film is both mythical and pragmatic, like Maori cosmology, the film embraces the sublime and magical yet appears very authentic and humorous at times. It helps if you have slept on a marae, know a little about Maori culture: utu, tapu, maketu, who a Tohunga is and what a Maori burial ground means, but the film stands on its own just like a sophisticated Samurai film by Kurosawa.
It is a must see film for any visitor to New Zealand, student of Maori history, martial artist or edge weapon enthusiast, or plain admirer of Samurai films.
Nick Spill is the author of “The Way of the Bodyguard – knowledge not gossip” and “Reluctant Q – the true story of a Quartermasters survival in the jungles of Burma in World War II” available on Amazon as paperbacks and e-books.

He is about to release “The Jaded Kiwi” on March 1, 2016 as a paperback and e-book, everywhere.
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Published on January 02, 2016 13:48

November 23, 2015

Gerald Posner's Warlords of Crime - the Chinese New Zealand connection

Found this treasure in my library. I just gave away 700 books. But Warlords of Crime I am keeping because it is so relevant to what I am editing right now: The Jaded Kiwi, a novel about the start of the War on Drugs in New Zealand. In the novel, there is a Chinese family that is growing 4 greenhouses of genetically manipulated sensimillia. Its the start of their bloody dynasty growing marijuana, even though things do not go as planned.

A few years ago New Zealand, with the advice of their Police, legalized prostitution. Last time I was there you could run a brothel with 4 women as a legitimate business. There were brothels everywhere. 4 women could gross over $1.5 million a year. Cash. Chinese businessmen were running these houses, importing young Asian women under student visas and rotating them through different houses around the country. These businessmen controlled the advertising, labor, reinvestment of cash profits, any possible money laundering, in fact they were handed a fully integrated monopoly by the NZ Government. The impenetrable mix of legitimate and illegitimate operations seems right out of Gerald Posner's book about Chinese Secret Societies.

Similar unintended consequences happen in my novel set in New Zealand in 1976. The Jaded Kiwi is coming out in December.

Meanwhile I could not resist posting Gerald's mustache! He is a great writer - and if you haven't read his latest wunderbook: God's Bankers - you should.
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Published on November 23, 2015 16:26

November 11, 2015

Remembrance of George Spill Regimental Quartermaster, Royal Artillery


In honor of my father, the veteran from Burma. One of the few of the original Forgotten Fourteenth Army to walk out of Burma at the end of World War II. He felt guilty about killing so many people and seeing so many men and civilians die. 

He wrote a book about his experiences, some are hilarious, others tragic. I published the book in paperback and e-book versions: Reluctant Q.


Above are the four medals he received in a small cardboard box. To the left was one of the last photos that was sent to his wife, from near Quetta, before the long journey to Burma, where most of his possessions, equipment and war buddies were lost. On the right George salutes when I took to the War Memorial in Auckland, New Zealand. This was one of the few times I had seen him stand tall and proud.
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Published on November 11, 2015 17:22

June 6, 2015

D-DAY in Burma



George Spill, author of RELUCTANT Q, heard about D-DAY a few days later in Burma, where he was stuck in a traffic jam caused by a Japanese ambush further up a hill. A team of Gurkhas dispatched the Japanese but not before George heard the news about Allied troops invading France. This photo was one of the last taken of George. He was in Quetta in his best "Bombay Bloomers" and pith helmet. By the time of D-Day his uniform was rags and an old steel helmet. Despite his skills and cunning as a Quartermaster supplying his Regiment with food and ammunition, any replacement clothing was non existent.
You can read more about the hilarious and tragic adventures of George Spill in his book: RELUCTANT Q.
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Published on June 06, 2015 10:00

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