frankfurt - Peters Fraser and Dunlop
Transcription
frankfurt - Peters Fraser and Dunlop
FRANKFURT 2012 www.petersfraserdunlop.com On 28th September 2012 Bloomsbury Reader, a new digital publishing imprint, celebrated its one year anniversary. Bloomsbury Reader publishes great books currently unavailable in print where all English-language rights have already reverted to the author or the author's Estate. During the last twelve months, Bloomsbury Reader has issued more than 500 titles from 100 authors, and has sold in excess of 46,000 units in both E-book format and Print on Demand. In addition, the imprint has had an Amazon bestseller with Plan C by Lois Cahall, which reached number 1 in the UK and number 2 in Germany. Plan C, along with The Twitter Diaries by Georgie Thompson and Imogen Lloyd Webber, was published as an E-book original and in traditional paperback format. Top selling authors within the digital imprint include Margery Allingham, Edmund Crispin, H.R.F. Keating, Anthony Masters, Ann Bridge and Nicolas Freeling. In the next twelve months, Bloomsbury Reader will be publishing an additional 200 titles by an ever-expanding list of exceptional writing talent. 2 RECENT SIGNINGS MARGERY ALLINGHAM One of the four Queens of Crime, Agatha Christie, Dorothy L Sayers, Ngaio Marsh. EDMUND CRISPIN One of the last great exponents of the ‘classic’ crime mystery. NICOLAS FREELING was a British crime novelist, best known as the author of the van der Valk series of detective novels. JANE AIKEN HODGE her works of fiction include historical novels and contemporary detective novels. HAMMOND INNES was a British novelist who wrote over 30 novels, as well as children’s and travel books NEW UK PUBLISHER—VINTAGE: JULY 2013 TO TIE IN WITH CENTENARY. DENNIS WHEATLEY His prolific output of stylish thrillers and occult novels made him one of the world's best-selling authors from the 1930s through the 1960s. NEW SIGNINGS JOANNA CANNAN, author of detective novels and pony books. LETTICE COOPER, author of The New House. MAZO DE LA ROCHE, author of the Jalna novels, one of the most popular series of books of her time. LEONARD GRIBBLE author of The Arsenal Stadium Mystery, filmed in 1939. BERYL KINGSTON is an English bestselling romantic novelist. DENIS MACKAIL was an English novelist and short-story writer, publishing between the two world-wars. ALISTAIR MAIR, author of crime and thrillers, winner of the Frederick Niven Award for The Ripening Time in 1962, and president of the Scottish PEN society from 1965 – 1970. RAYMOND POSTGATE was an English social historian and mystery novelist, author of Verdict of Twelve. JOHN B. SANFORD was an American screenwriter and author of 24 books. The Cambridge Companion to Jewish American Literature describes him as, "Perhaps the most outstanding neglected novelist.” GEORGES SIMENON One of the best-selling European authors of the 20th Century. Translated into more than 50 languages and sold in more than 50 countries. 3 GENERAL FICTION & NON-FICTION GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MARGERY ALLINGHAM– Part of Bloomsbury Reader RECENT SIGNING “Margery Allingham stands out like a shining light. And she has another quality, not usually associated with crime stories, elegance.” Agatha Christie ALBERT CAMPION SERIES The Campion universe and story arc runs through some 20 novels and 44 short stories THE FASHION IN SHROUDS Margery Allingham was born in Ealing, London in 1904 to a family immersed in literature. Her first novel, Blackkerchief Dick, was published in 1923 when she was 19. Her first work of detective fiction was a serialized story published by the Daily Express in 1927. Entitled The White Cottage Mystery, it contained atypical themes for a woman writer of the era. Her breakthrough occurred in 1929 with the publication of The Crime at Black Dudley. This introduced Albert Campion, albeit originally as a minor character. He returned in Mystery Mile, thanks in part to pressure from her American publishers, much taken with the character. Campion proved so successful that Allingham made him the centrepiece of another 17 novels and over 20 short stories, continuing into the 1960s. Allingham suffered from breast cancer and died at Severalls Hospital, Colchester, England, on 30 June 1966. First, there is a skeleton in a dinner jacket. Then a corpse in a golden aeroplane. After another body, Albert Campion nearly makes a fourth… Both the skeleton and the corpse have died with suspicious convenience for Georgia Wells, a monstrous but charming actress with a raffish entourage. Georgia’s best friend just happens to be Valentine, a top couturiere and Campion’s sister. In order to protect Valentine, Campion must unravel a story of blackmail and ruthless murder. RIGHTS SOLD UK Publisher: Vintage US: Felony & Mayhem French: Place des Editeurs (Death of a Ghost, Hide My Eyes, The Fashion in Shrouds, The Tiger in the Smoke, Traitor’s Purse) Greek: Agra Publication (The Tiger in the Smoke) Italian: Mondadori (kiosk rights in 6 title—More Work for the Undertaker, The White Cottage Mystery, Black Plumes, Dancers in Mourning, Flowers for the Judge—and 3 short stories collections—Mr. Campion and Others, The Allingham Case-Book, The Return of Mr. Campion) Polish: Publicat (Dancers in Mourning, Police at the Funeral, Sweet Danger) Spanish: RBA Libros (Dancers in Mourning, Death of a Ghost, More Work for the Undertaker, The Tiger in The Smoke) Russian: Hemiro (Hide My Eyes, The Fashion in Shrouds) THE TIGER IN THE SMOKE Jack Havoc, jail-breaker and knife artist, is on the loose on the streets of London once again. In the faded squares of shabby houses, in the furtive alleys and darkened pubs, the word is out that the Tiger is back in town, more vicious and cunning than ever. It falls to Albert Campion to pit his wits against the killer and hunt him down through the city’s November smog before it is too late. 6 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Blackkerchief Dick (1923) BR The White Cottage Mystery (1928)BR The Crime at Black Dudley (1929) (US: The Black Dudley Murder) Mystery Mile (1930) Look to the Lady (1931) (US: The Gyrth Chalice Mystery) Police at the Funeral (1931) Sweet Danger (1933) (US: Kingdom of Death/ The Fear Sign) Other Man's Danger (1933) (US: The Man of Dangerous Secrets) (as Maxwell March) Death of a Ghost (1934) Rogue's Holiday (1935) (as Maxwell March) Flowers for the Judge (1936) (US: Legacy in Blood) The Shadow in the House (1936) (as Maxwell March) Mr. Campion: Criminologist (1937) (short stories) The Case of the Late Pig (1937) (originally appeared in Mr Campion: Criminologist) Dancers in Mourning (1937) (US: Who Killed Chloe?) The Fashion in Shrouds (1938) Mr. Campion and Others (1939) (short stories) Black Plumes (1940) Traitor's Purse (1941) (US: The Sabotage Murder Mystery) The Oaken Heart (1941) (autobiographical) Dance of the Years (1943) (aka The Galantrys) Coroner's Pidgin (1945) (US: Pearls Before Swine) Wanted: Someone Innocent (1946) (short stories) The Casebook of Mr Campion (1947) (short stories) More Work for the Undertaker (1948) Deadly Duo (1949) (UK: Take Two at Bedtime (1950)) (two novellas) The Tiger in the Smoke (1952) No Love Lost (1954) (two novellas) The Beckoning Lady (1955) (US: The Estate of the Beckoning Lady) Hide My Eyes (1958) (US: Tether's End/Ten Were Missing) The China Governess (1962) The Mind Readers (1965) Cargo of Eagles (1968) (completed by Philip Youngman Carter) The Allingham CaseBook (1969) (short stories) Mr. Campion's Farthing (1969) (by Philip Youngman Carter) Mr. Campion's Falcon (1970) (US: Mr. Campion's Quarry) (by Philip Youngman Carter) The Allingham Minibus (1973) (aka Mr. Campion's Lucky Day) (short stories) The Return of Mr. Campion (1989) (short stories) The Darings of the Red Rose (1995) (originally an anonymously-published serial) Room to Let: A RadioPlay (1999) TRAITOR’S PURSE Celebrated amateur detective Albert Campion awakes in hospital accused of attacking a police officer, and suffering from acute amnesia. All he can remember is that he was on a mission of vital importance to His Majesty’s government before his accident. On the run from the police and unable to recognise even his faithful servant Lugg or his own fiancée, Campion Struggles desperately to put the pieces together while the very faith of England is at stake. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 7 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION HILAIRE BELLOC—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “A great master of the English Language… Hilaire Belloc added, year by year, and often several times in one year, to the riches of English prose and verse.” - The Times THE SERVILE STATE Joseph Hilaire Pierre René Belloc was an AngloFrench writer and historian who became a naturalised British subject in 1902. He was one of the most prolific writers in England during the early twentieth century. He was known as a writer, orator, poet, satirist, man of letters and political activist. He is most notable for his Catholic faith, which had a strong impact on most of his works and his writing collaboration with G. K. Chesterton. He was President of the Oxford Union and later MP for Salford from 1906 to 1910. He was a noted disputant, with a number of long-running feuds, but also widely regarded as a humane and sympathetic man. His most lasting legacy is probably his verse, which encompasses cautionary tales and religious poetry. Among his best-remembered poems are Jim, who ran away from his nurse, and was eaten by a lion and Matilda, who told lies and was burnt to death. RIGHTS SOLD Italian: Liberlibri (The Servile State), Cagantigalli (The Path to Rome) Croatian: Naklada Benedikta (Great Heresies, How the Reformation Happened, Survivals and New Arrivals) The Servile State is a book written by Hilaire Belloc in 1912 about economics. Although it mentions Distributism, for which he and his friend G. K. Chesterton are famous, it avoids explicit advocation for that economic system. This book lays out, in very broad outline, Belloc's version of European economic history: starting with ancient states, where slavery was critical to the economy, through the medieval economies based on serf and peasant labor, to capitalism. Belloc argues that the development of capitalism was not a natural consequence of the Industrial Revolution, but a consequence of the earlier dissolution of the monasteries in England, which then shaped the course of English industrialization. English capitalism then spread across the world. Belloc then makes his case for the natural instability of pure capitalism and discusses how (as he believes) attempts to reform capitalism will lead almost inexorably to an economy where state regulation has removed the freedom of capitalism and thereby replaced capitalism with the Servile State, which shares with ancient slavery the fact that positive law (as opposed to custom or economic necessity by themselves) dictates that certain people will work for others, who likewise must take care of them. THE PATH TO ROME Considered by Belloc himself, and by most critics, his greatest work, this classic book is the delightful story of the pilgrimage Belloc made on foot to Rome in order to fulfill a vow he had made "...and see all Europe which the Christian Faith has saved..." In The Life of Hilaire Belloc, Robert Speaight states: "More than any other book he ever wrote, The Path to Rome made Belloc's name; more than any other, it has been lovingly thumbed and pondered.... The book is a classic, born of something far deeper than the physical experience it records." Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 8 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Verses and Sonnets (1896) The Bad Child's Book Of Beasts (1896) More Beasts for Worse Children (1897) The Modern Traveller (1898) Danton; a study (1899) Paris, Its Sites, Monuments and History (1898) A Moral Alphabet (1899) Paris (1900) Lambkin's remains (1900) Robespierre (1901) The Path To Rome(1902) BR The great inquiry; faithfully reported by Hilaire Belloc and ornamented with sharp cuts drawn on the spot by G. K. Chesterton (1903) Caliban's Guide to Letters (1903) Emmanuel Burden, Merchant (1904) Avril. Essays on the French Renaissance (1904) The Old Road: From Canterbury to Winchester (1904) Hills and the Sea (1906) Sussex (1906) Esto Perpetua: Algerian Studies and Impressions (1906) Cautionary Tales for Children (1907) The Historic Thames (1907) Mr. Clutterbuck's Election (1908) On Nothing and Kindred Subjects (1908) On Everything (1909) The Eye-Witness (1908) A Change in the Cabinet (1909) Marie Antoinette (1909) The Pyrenees (1909) Pongo and the Bull (1910) Catholicism and Socialism: Second Series (1910) On Anything (1910) On Something (1910) Verses (1910) The Party System (1911) More Peers (1911) The Four Men: a Farrago (1911) The French Revolution (1911) The Girondin (1911) First and last (1911) British Battles: Blenheim (1911) Turcoing (1912), Crécy (1912), Waterloo (1912), Malplaquet, Poitiers (1913); as Six British Battles 1931, 1951 The Servile State (1912) The Green Overcoat (1912) The River of London (1912) This and That and the Other (1912) History of England (1912) The Stane Street: a monograph (1913) Warfare in England (1913) The Book of the Bayeux tapestry (1914) Land & Water; The World's War Vol. II (Parts 14 to 26) (1914) The Romance of Tristan and Iseult (1915) History of England (1915) The Two Maps of Europe (1915) A Change in the Cabinet (1915) A General Sketch of the European War, the First Phase (1915) At the Sign of the Lion (1916) The last days of the French monarchy (1916) A General Sketch of the European War, The Second Phase (1916) The Free Press (1918) Europe And The Faith (1920) The House of Commons and Monarchy (1920) The Jews (1922) The Mercy of Allah (1922) The Road (1923) The Contrast (1923) On (1923) Economics for Helen (1924) The Cruise of the Nona (1925) This and that and the other (1925) Mr. Petre (1925) The French Revolution (1925) The Campaign of 1812 and the Retreat from Moscow (1925) A Companion to Mr. Wells's "Outline of History" (1926) Mr. Belloc Still Objects (1926) The Catholic Church and History (1926) Short Talks with the Dead and others (1926) The emerald of Catherine the Great (1926) Essays of Today and Yesterday (1926) Miniatures of French History (1926) Mrs. Markham's New History of England (1926) The Highway and Its Vehicles (1926) Oliver Cromwell (1927) The Haunted House (1927) BR Towns of Destiny (1927) Do We Agree?: A Debate Between G. K. Chesterton And Bernard Shaw, with Hilaire Belloc in the Chair (1928) Many Cities (1928) M. Wells et Dieu. Des poèmes et des essais (1928) James II (1928) But Soft - We Are Observed! (1928) How the Reformation Happened (1928) Belinda: a tale of affection in youth and age (1928) A Conversation with an Angel: and other essays (1928) The Chanty of the Nona (1928) The Missing Masterpiece (1929) Richelieu (1929) Survivals and New Arrivals: The Old and New Enemies of the Catholic Church (1929) The Man Who Made Gold (1930) Wolsey (1930) The Catholic Church and Current Literature (1930) Joan of Arc (1930) Pauline - Favorite Sister of Napoleon (1930) New Cautionary Tales (1930) Essays of a Catholic Layman in England (1931) A Conversation with a Cat: and others (1931) Cranmer (1931) On Translation (1931) One Hundred and one Ballades (1931) Nine Nines or Novenas from a Chinese Litany of Odd Numbers (1931) Napoleon (1932) The Postmaster General (1932) BR Saulieu Of The Morvan (1932) The Question and the Answer (1932) Ladies and Gentlemen: For Adults Only and Mature at That (1932) An Heroic Poem in Praise of Wine (1932) Charles the First, King of England (1933) William the Conqueror (1933) Below bridges (1933) The Tactics and Strategy of the Great Duke of Marlborough (1933) How We Got The Bible (1934) A Shorter History of England (1934) 9 Milton (1935) The Restoration Of Property (1936) The hedge and the horse (1936) The Battleground: Syria and Palestine, The Seedplot of Religion (1936) The County of Sussex (1936) The Crisis Of Our Civilisation (1937) The Crusades : The World's Debate (1937) An Essay on the Nature of Contemporary England (1937) Stories, essays, poems (1938) Monarchy: a study of Louis XIV (1938) Return to the Baltic (1938) BR The Great Heresies (1938) The Church and Socialism (1938) The Case of Dr. Coulton (1938) On sailing the sea; a collection of seagoing writings (1939) The Last Rally: A Story of Charles II (1939) The Silence Of The Sea and Other Essays (1940) On the Place of Gilbert Chesterton in English Letters (1940) The Catholic and the War (1940) The Alternative (1940) Elizabethan Commentary (1942) Places (1942) Sonnets and Verse (1945) The Romance of Tristan and Iseult by Joseph Bedier (1945) Selected Essays (1948) An Anthology of his Prose and Verse (1951) World Conflict (1951) Songs of the South Country (1951) GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION PHYLLIS BENTLEY—Part of Bloomsbury Reader THE INHERITANCE TRILOGY Filmed by Granada in 1967, the Inheritance trilogy is Phyllis Bentley’s most widely acclaimed work. Set against the backdrop of the textile industry in the West Riding of Yorkshire, the trilogy chronicles the lives of several families over 153 trouble-torn years, from the Luddite riots of 1812 to the death of Sir Winston Churchill in 1965. Phyllis Eleanor Bentley, OBE (November 19, 1894 June 27, 1977), was an English novelist. The youngest child of a mill owner, she grew up in Halifax in the West Riding of Yorkshire, and was educated at Halifax High School for Girls and Cheltenham Ladies' College. During World War I she worked in the munitions industry. After the war, she returned to her native Halifax where she taught English and Latin. In 1918 she published her first work, a collection of short stories entitled The World's Bane, after which she published several poor-selling novels until the publication in March 1932 of her best-known work, Inheritance, set against the background of the development of the textile industry in the West Riding, which received widespread critical acclaim and ran through twenty-three impressions by 1946, making her the first successful English regional novelist since Thomas Hardy and his Wessex. Two further novels followed in 1946 and 1966, forming a trilogy, and in 1967 Inheritance was filmed by Granada TV, with John Thaw and James Bolam in leading roles. In 1968 she wrote the children's novel Gold Pieces, which is a fictionalised account, seen through the eyes of a twelve-year-old boy, of the Cragg Coiners, who defrauded the government by clipping the edges of gold coins to melt down and make into new coins. In 1949 she was awarded an honorary DLitt from Leeds University; in 1958 she became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature; and in 1970 was awarded an OBE. Vividly depicted, and moving to the last, this trilogy is an example of regional fiction at its finest. Speaking of the reason for the work, Bentley wrote that it is a story of “decency and integrity, courage and compassion… passed down the generations; we are always the heirs of the past and begetters of the future ages. It will be seen that this thought is the meaning of the title 'Inheritance.' It is not material wealth which is meant, but a spiritual heritage." BIBLIOGRAPHY The World's Bane (1918) Environment (1922) Cat in the Manger (1923) The Spinner of the Years (1928) The Partnership (1928) Carr (1929) Trio (1930) Inheritance (1932) BR A Modern Tragedy (1934)BR The Whole of the Story (1935) Freedom Farewell (1936) Manhold (1941) The English Regional (1942) The Rise of Henry Morcar (1946) BR The Brontës (1947) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 10 The House of Moreys (1953) Noble in Reason (1955) Crescendo (1958) BR The Young Brontës (1960) O Dreams O Destinations (1962) A Man Of His Time (1966) BR Gold Pieces (1968) The Brontës and Their World (1969) Sheep May Safely Graze (1972) Tales of West Riding (1974) BR Take Courage (1940) BR Ring in the New (1969) BR GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ANN BRIDGE —Part of Bloomsbury Reader ‘Almost unmixed delight....Exciting and illuminating and deserves comparison with A Passage to India.’ – L.P. Hartley of Peking Picnic Ann Bridge (real name, Mary Anne O’Malley) was a mid-twentieth century novelist who began her writing career by drawing on and exploiting the milieu of the British Foreign Office community in Peking, China, where she lived for two years with her diplomat husband. Her novels combine courtship plots with vividly-realised settings and demure social satire. She went on to write novels which take a serious investigation of modern historical developments as the background of their protagonists’ emotional lives. Ann Bridge also wrote thrillers centred on a female amateur detective, travel books and family memoirs. PEKING PICNIC Laura Leroy inhabits the two realms of her Oxford past and Peking present. Into her current world of exotic beauty and brutality comes Vinstead, a professor from Cambridge and a reminder of all she has left behind. A picnic party leaves for the hills near Peking and tensions rise as Laura cautiously responds to Vinstead’s attraction and their fragile world comes under threat. ILLYRIAN SPRING Lady Grace Kilmichael heads to the Dalmatian Coast with her paintbrushes and a copy of The Stones of Venice to escape her rapidly disintegrating home life. Her husband, a celebrated economist, is having an affair (though it appears to be more of an intellectual than a sexual one) with a woman whose intellectual prowess is far beyond Grace's; their marriage has become lifeless and Grace feels stupid and useless in her husband's presence. Her only daughter, Linnet, a beautiful 19 year old, is dismissive of her mother and while she loves her, resents her neediness. Grace realises a radical overhaul of her life is needed, and so she heads off alone to discover who she really is and why her life hasn't turned out as she had expected. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 11 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Julia Probyn Series: The Lighthearted Quest (1956) BR The Portuguese Escape (1958) BR Julia Involved: Three Julia Probyn Novels (1960) The Numbered Account (1960) BR The Dangerous Islands (1963) BR Emergency in the Pyrenees (1965) BR The Episode at Toledo (1966) BR The Malady in Madeira (1970) BR Julia in Ireland (1973) BR Novels Peking Picnic (1932) The Ginger Griffin (1934) Illyrian Spring (1935) Enchanter’s Nightshade (1937) BR Four-Part Setting (1938) A Place to Stand (1940) BR Frontier Passage (1942) Singing Waters (1943) And Then you Came (1948) The House at Kilmartin (1951) The Dark Moment (1951) BR The Tightening String (1962) BR Permission to Resign (1971) Non Fiction Portrait of My Mother (1955) The Selective Traveller in Portugal (1958) Facts and Fictions: Some Literary Recollections (1968) Moments of Knowing (1970) RIGHTS SOLD UK: Capuchin Classics (Peking Picnic), Daunt Books (Illyrian Spring) 12 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION JOANNA CANNAN NEW SIGNING MURDER INCLUDED In the prospectus for the Aston Park Guest House and stables, murder was not mentioned. One of the guests is found dead in bed one morning and suspicion is concentrated on the household alone. All are suspects - Sir Charles d'Estray, the owner, his young wife and her adolescent French daughter, the Joanna Cannan (1896-1961), was the youngest daugh- hard-riding guest and even the more staid ones. ter of a distinguished Oxford don and inherited DEATH AT THE DOG Scottish grit and determination from her mother. Often left to themselves‚ 'playing out romantic Young Inspector Northeast falls under the spell of dramas based on favourite books' (DNB), the Cannan an unconventional older woman novelist who is the girls grew up to be self-reliant and bookish: May chief suspect in a village murder. "The Dog" of the (Wedderburn Cannan) was a well-known First World title is a pub, which is modelled after the pub in War poet. Joanna hoped to go to the Slade but in Oxfordshire frequented by the author during the 1918 married Captain Harold Pullein-Thompson and Second World War. Set in the late fall of 1939 moved to Wimbledon. From 1922 onwards she beduring the first anxious months of World War II, this came the joint family breadwinner, publishing a book is a fine example of the classic English detective a year until she died. In the 1930s the Pulleinnovel. It marked the second and final appearance Thompsons bought a house near Henley for their four for Northeast. children and numerous animals. Here Joanna wrote 300 words every morning in the sitting-room AND BE A VILLAIN (emerging to find lunch cooked): novels, including Princes in the Land (1938), detective novels and In order to discuss plans for her future, Laura the first pony book, a genre which her daughters JoseLangley visits her daughter, Eve, and her husband, phine, Diana and Christine were to make very much Richard, a doctor. However Richard is discovered their own—go to p. 81 for a list of her Pony Books. murdered. But by whom? Could it be the man whose baby died because Richard refused to visit? BIBLIOGRAPHY Could it be the boyfriend of Richard's receptionist? Laura decides to make a few enquiries of her own. The Tripled Crown. (A book of Princes In The Land (1936) English, Scotch and Irish verse for the age of six to sixteen) (co-author) (1908) The Misty Valley (1922) Wild Berry Wine (1925) The Lady Of the Heights (1926) Sheila Both Ways (1928) The Simple Pass On (1929) No walls of Jasper (1930) Orphan of Mars (1930) The Hour of the Angel: Ithuriel's Hour (1931) High Table (1931) Snow In Harvest (1932) North Wall (1933) Under Proof (1934) The Hills Sleep On (1935) A Hand to Burn (1936) Frightened Angels (1936) (Republished by Persephone Books in 2006) Pray Do Not Venture (1937) They Rang Up the Police (1939) Idle Apprentice (1940) Death at The Dog (1940) Blind Messenger (1941) Little I Understood (1948) Murder Included (later republished as A Taste of Murder and in the USA as Poisonous Relations) (1950) And all I learned (1951) Body In The Beck (1952) Long Shadows (1955) People to be found (1956) And be a Villain (1958) All is Discovered (1962) 13 RIGHTS SOLD: UK and translation: Persephone Books (Princes in the Land) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION LETTICE COOPER—Part of Bloomsbury Reader NEW SIGNING THE NEW HOUSE Lettice Cooper (1897–1994), was an English writer. She was born in Eccles, Lancashire on 3 September 1897. She began to write stories when she was seven, and studied Classics at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford graduating in 1918. She returned home after Oxford to work for her family's engineering firm and wrote her first novel, The Lighted Room in 1925. She spent a year as associate editor at Time and Tide and during the Second World War worked for the Ministry of Food's public relations division. Between 1947 and 1957 she was fiction reviewer for the Yorkshire Post. She was one of the founders of the Writers' Action Group along with Brigid Brophy, Maureen Duffy, Francis King and Michael Levy and received an OBE for her work in achieving Public Lending Rights. In 1987 at the age of ninety she was awarded the Freedom of the City of Leeds. She never married and died on 24 July 1994 in Coltishall, Norfolk. RIGHTS SOLD UK: Persephone Books (The New House) BIBLIOGRAPHY The New House examines one day in the life of a family: sister Rhoda and mother Natalie are moving out of the old family home to a smaller house, while younger sister Delia looks forward to marriage and helping her husband with his work and brother Maurice tries not to think about his fragile, shallow marriage. The differences (and similarities) in the women's lives are especially finely observed, as Rhoda tries to decide whether to break out of her old life by taking over the job Delia will have to give up when she marries or to stay as a helpmeet to her selfish mother and end up like her aunt Ellen. FENNY The offer of a summer post as governess to the granddaughter of a famous actress seems a dazzling prospect to Ellen Fenwick, far removed from the fireside teas and prize-givings of her Yorkshire high school. And the Villa Meridiana, surveying the Tuscan hills, with their vines and rows of silvery olives, provides a dreamlike setting for the new life she anticipates. Here she tastes her first cocktail, cuts her hair, becomes 'Fenny' and falls in love. But in this closeknit expatriate community, relationships are often not what they seem: as fascism threatens the heart of Italy, Fenny is forced to come to terms with both emotional and political realities. Moving from 1933 to 1949, this is a stirring account of Fenny's development and of the experiences which shape the resilient woman she becomes. 'Certainly Lettice Cooper's finest novel' - Storm Jameson The New House (1936) (Reprinted by Persephone Books in 2004) The Lighted Room (1925) National Provincial (1938) BR Fenny (1953) Biography of Robert Louis Stevenson (1947) Black Bethlehem (1947) Blackberry's Kitten (1960) Tea on Sunday (1973) Snow and Roses (1976) BR Desirable Residence (1980) Unusual Behaviour (1986) Une Journee avec Rhoda (1994) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 14 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION COLIN CLARK “Sheer delight… sharp, funny and irreverent” - Sunday Telegraph THE PRINCE THE SHOWGIRL AND ME/ MY WEEK WITH MARILYN Colin Clark, son of Lord Clark and brother of Alan, was born in London in 1932. He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, and served as a pilot in the RAF during National Service. In 1956 he worked on the Laurence Olivier/Marilyn Monroe film 'The Prince and the Showgirl', an experience he described in the journal he kept at the time, published to acclaim in 1995 as 'The Prince, the Showgirl and Me'. He then became a personal assistant to Olivier, acting as the stage manager on John Osborne's 'The Entertainer' at the Royal Court and accompanying Olivier and Vivien Leigh on the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre's European tour of 'Titus Andronicus'. From there he moved to Granada Television. He produced and directed over a hundred documentary films, including 'The Romantic Rebellion', 'Pioneers of Modern Painting' and 'Jazz at the New School'. His autobiography, 'Younger Brother, Younger Son', appeared in 1997. He died in December 2002 in London. ‘The Prince, the Showgirl and Me’ is Colin Clark's diary account of his time on the set of ‘The Prince and the Showgirl’, the film that united Sir Laurence Olivier with Marilyn Monroe, on honeymoon with her new husband, the playwright Arthur Miller. Nearly 40 years on, his diary account was chosen as a “book of the year”, but one week was missing, and ‘My Week with Marilyn’ is the story of that week: an idyll in which he escorted a Monroe desperate to get away from the pressures of working with Olivier and all the people with a vested interest in her. Her new husband Arthur Miller had gone to Paris, and the coast was clear for Colin to introduce her to some of the pleasures of British life. This was released as a major motion picture in Autumn 2011, starring Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe, and Eddie Redmayne as Colin Clark. RIGHTS SOLD UK: HarperCollins (The Prince, The Showgirl and Me, My Week With Marilyn) US: Perseus (The Prince, The Showgirl and Me, My Week With Marilyn) German: Schirmer Mosel Verlag (My Week With Marilyn) Croatian: VBZ (My Week With Marilyn) Japanese: Shochinsha (My Week With Marylin) Polish: Znak (My Week With Marylin) Portuguese (Brazil): Editora Pensamento-Cultrix (My Week With Marilyn) Russian: Slovo (My Week With Marilyn) Hungarian: Gabo (My Week With Marilyn) Lithuanian: UAB de Libris (My Week With Marilyn) Italian: Mondadori (My Week With Marilyn) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 15 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION NORMAN COLLINS—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Both as a writer, and in his role as one of broadcasting’s first hauts fonctionnaires, he clearly envisaged popular art as a kind of societal glue, designed to bring people together rather than to drive them apart.” — The Times Literary Supplement THE HUSBAND’S STORY This - as only Norman Collins can tell it - is the story of Stanley Pitts, a Contracts Filing Clerk in the Admiralty, a small man, small in stature, ambition Norman Collins (born 3 October 1907, died 1982), and achievement, happy in his work, and devoted to was a British writer, and later a radio and television his hobby of photography. executive, who became one of the major figures behind the establishment of the Independent When Stan's tasteful photographic study of Television (ITV) network in the UK. This was the first "Hoarfrost on Wimbledon Common" wins the organisation to break the BBC’s broadcasting Admiralty Division Photographic Competition on the monopoly when it began transmitting in 1955. very eve of his expected promotion, never had the future looked brighter for the inhabitants of no. 16. Collins began his career as a novelist, publishing How then did Stan, with his pride in his job and his several successful works such as London Belongs to keen sense of duty, find his way into the dock of No. Me (which was later filmed) in the 1930s while also 1 court at the Old Bailey? Why was the sentence working in broadcasting as a producer for BBC Radio. such a savage one? And what part did Mr Cheevers, In 1946 he was appointed the Controller of the Light crime reporter of the Sunday Sun, play in all this? Programme, the BBC’s more populist, entertainment -based radio service which had grown out of the BBC Ever a master story-teller, the high comedy and Forces Programme first established to entertain almost unbearable suspense of Norman Collins’ novel allied troops, but which had also become hugely make it a brilliant and unforgettable read. popular with domestic audiences, during the Second World War. BIBLIOGRAPHY At the Light Programme he created one of the most iconic programmes in the history of British radio broadcasting: the adventure series Dick Barton: Special Agent, which ran for 711 episodes between 1946 and 1951, following the adventures of a dashing secret agent. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal The Facts of Fiction (1932) BR Penang Appointment (1934) The Three Friends (1935) Trinity Town (1936) Flames Coming Out of the Top (1937) BR Love in Our Time (1938) I Shall Not Want (1940) BR Anna Collins (1942) BR London Belongs to Me (1945) Black Ivory (1948) Children of the Archbishop (1951) The Bat that Flits (1952) BR Bond Street Story (1958) The Governor's Lady (1968) BR The Husband's Story (1978) BR Little Nelson (1981) BR 16 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION IVY COMPTON-BURNETT—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “She is my favourite writer, if I have one. If I’m exhausted and I can’t write, and I feel as if my engine has run down, then all I have to do is pick up an Ivy Compton-Burnett novel — any will do — and I can write again.” – Hilary Mantel MOTHER AND SON The exacting Miranda's search for a suitable companion brings her conventional family into contact with a very different kind of household, raising questions about the ability to manage alone, the difficulties of living with strangers and, indeed, some strange discoveries about intimates. As tables are beautifully arranged, secrets are revealed, family bonds are fiercely shaken and new proposals are made. Compton-Burnett casts an unflinching and acerbic eye on the nature of companionship and the fear of being alone. Ivy Compton-Burnett (1884-1969) was a contemporary of Virginia Woolf, who wrote in her diary of how her own writing was "much inferior to the bitter truth and intense originality of Miss Compton-Burnett". Ivy Compton-Burnett’s own tragic experiences of family life provided some of the material she drew on as a novelist. Her books are about money, power, status, incest, adultery, murder, homosexuality, about which she was years ahead of her time, and all the passions and stresses of family life, described with brilliant wit and perception. RIGHTS SOLD French: Editions Phébus (A Family and a Fortune, Elders and Betters, Parents and Children) Editions Gallimard (Men and Wives, A House and its Head) Italian: Adelphi (A Heritage and its History) Spanish: Random House Mondadori (A Heritage and its History, A House and its Head, Daughters and Sons, Manservant and Maidservant); La Bestia Equilatera (A Family and a Fortune) US/UK: Hesperus (Pastors and Masters) MANSERVANT AND MAIDSERVANT ‘…Compton-Burnett’s masterpiece. The verbal counterpoint is razorsharp and the characters memorable…[her] social tapestry is at times so rich that… it is even reminiscent of Shakespeare.” – Los Angeles Times One of Ivy Compton-Burnett’s own favourites, Manservant and Maidservant was a phenomenal success in the United States. One of her funniest and most surprising inventions, it focuses on the household of Horace Lamb - sadist, skinflint and tyrant; a man whose children fear and hate him and whose wife is planning to elope. But it is when Horace undergoes an altogether unforeseeable change of heart that the real difficulties begin. Translation Rights Contact: ILA (Intercontinental Literary Agency) 17 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION EDMUND CRISPIN—Part of Bloomsbury Reader RECENT SIGNING GERVASE FEN SERIES The eccentric professor Gervase Fen is an eloquent, brilliant academic who prefers to solve crimes in and around Oxford University. Crispin’s novels offer intelligent entertainment, ingenious plots, wit and literary allusion, sharply observed dialogue and high quality writing. Edmund Crispin was the pseudonym of Robert Bruce Montgomery (2 October 1921 — 15 September 1978), an English crime writer and composer. Montgomery wrote nine detective novels and two collections of short stories under the pseudonym Edmund Crispin (taken from a character in Michael Innes's Hamlet, Revenge!). The stories feature Oxford don Gervase Fen, who is a Professor of English at the university and a fellow of St Christopher's College, a fictional institution that Crispin locates next to St John's College. The whodunit novels have complex plots and fantastic, somewhat unbelievable solutions, including examples of the locked room mystery. They are written in a humorous, literary and sometimes farcical style and they are also among the few mystery novels to break the fourth wall occasionally and speak directly to the audience. BIBLIOGRAPHY The Case of the Gilded Fly Buried for Pleasure (1948) (1944) Frequent Hearses (1950) Holy Disorders (1945) BR The Long Divorce (1952) The Moving Toyshop (1946) was dedicated to Crispin's great friend and fellow admirer of the work of John Dickson Carr, Philip Larkin. Beware of the Trains (1953) (short story collection) BR Swan Song (1947) Fen Country (1979) BR The Glimpses of the Moon (1977) BR Love Lies Bleeding (1948) Crispin is considered by many to be one of the last great exponents of the 'classic' crime mystery. RIGHTS SOLD UK: Vintage US: Felony & Mayhem Spanish: Impedimenta (Love Lies Bleeding, Swan Song, The Moving Toyshop) Greek: Agra Publication (The Moving Toyshop) Russian: AST Publishers (The Case of the Gilded Fly, The Moving Toyshop) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 18 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE MOVING TOYSHOP Arriving late at night for a holiday in Oxford, the poet Richard Cadogan stumbles across the body of a dead woman in a toyshop. When he returns with the police, the toyshop is a grocery store and there is no sign of the corpse. Cadogan joins forces with the eccentric Professor Gervase Fen to solve the mystery, Battling with limerick clues, an unusual will, an impossible murder and disappearing evidence, the bookish duo rampage through the university town determined to find answers. Crispin’s most famous novel is fast-moving, funny and full of entertaining literary puzzles. SWAN SONG “A rococo classic. It has abundantly the pervasive charm of the genre” The Times When an opera company gathers in Oxford for the firs post-war production of Wagner’s Die Meistersinger, their happiness is soon soured by the discovery that the unpleasant Edwin Shorthouse will be singing a leading role. Nearly everyone involved has reason to loathe Shorthouse but who amongst them has the fiendish ingenuity to kill him in his own locked dressing room? “Hilarious… ranks among the most amusing light novels ever written” Washington Post In the course of this entertaining adventure, eccentric Oxford don Gervase Fen has to unravel two murders, cope with the unpredictability of the artistic temperament, and attempt to encourage the course of true love. LOVE LIES BLEEDING Castrevenford School is preparing for Speech Day and Professor Gervase Fen is called upon to present the prizes. However, the night before the big day strange events take place that leave two members of staff dead. The Headmaster turns to Professor Fen to investigate the murders. While disentangling the facts of the case, Fen is forced to deal with student love affairs, a kidnapping and a lost Shakespearean manuscript. By turns hilarious and chilling, Love Lies Bleeding is a classic of the detective genre. 19 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION CECIL DAY LEWIS/ NICHOLAS BLAKE—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “If C. Day-Lewis is remembered these days, it’s as the Poet Laureate of his day…But crime cognoscenti esteem his alter ego, the Golden Age crime writer Nicholas Blake…erudite, quirkily characterised detective novels.” – The Times THE BEAST MUST DIE ‘Still impresses as one of the most darkly compelling of psychological novels’ – The Times Cecil Day-Lewis (1904–1972) was an Irish-born poet. He was Poet Laureate for Britain from 1968 until his death in 1972 and, under the pseudonym Nicholas Blake, a mystery writer. He is the father of actor Daniel Day-Lewis and documentary filmmaker and television chef Tamasin Day-Lewis. He wrote twenty detective novels as Nicholas Blake, most of them featuring Nigel Strangeways, a charming amateur sleuth who uses literary references to solve mysteries. The novels follow Strangeways’ story from his idealistic early days, through the darker days of World War II and the death of his wife, to the more self-aware stories of the 1950s and 1960s. ‘I am going to kill a man…I have no idea what he looks like. But I am going to find him and kill him.’ Frank Cairnes is determined to seek revenge on the hit and run driver who killed his young son. The case has baffled the police but Cairnes successfully tracks down the driver, an unpleasant bully called George Rattery. Cairnes befriends Rattery in hope of getting close enough to kill him, all the while recording his murder plans in his diary. But before the murder is due to take place, Rattery reveals that he has discovered the diary and sent it to his solicitors. When Rattery is poisoned the same day, Cairnes is naturally the prime suspect and calls on Nigel Strangeways to help him clear his name… The Beast Must Die is widely recognized as a classic of twentieth century crime writing. A PENKNIFE IN MY HEART Two men agree to exchange murders to provide themselves with the perfect alibis. One exchanges the murder of a wealthy uncle for the murder of the other’s neurotic wife. One murderer seems more evil than the other, but is that really the case? 20 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE PRIVATE WOUND A TANGLED WEB Disowned by his wealthy mother after he runs off with Maria, the family maid, young David Chesterman seeks advice from an old acquaintance, wigmaker Karl Gault. Aware that David is a compulsive thief, Karl suggests that they go into business together as criminals. But soon Karl falls in love with Maria and decides to get rid of David by setting him up for a murder rap… A Tangled Web is based on a true case and was filmed as an episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, starring Robert Redford. The last detective novel that Day-Lewis wrote before his death in 1972 and widely considered to be most autobiographical of his mystery novels, The Private Wound is an atmospheric, classical whodunit about a young Irish novelist who rents a lonely cottage in the west of Ireland to write his new book. The novelist gets involved with the wife of a local farmer, a violent, impoverished older man. The horrific murder that takes place and the intense emotions of the relationships and drama are set against the backdrop of the beautiful Irish hills and waters. RIGHTS SOLD BIBLIOGRAPHY UK: Vintage UK: Vintage Crime (Nigel Strangeways Series) published May 2012 A Question of Proof (1935) Thou Shell of Death (1936) There’s Trouble Brewing (1937) The Beast Must Die (1938) The Smiler With The Knife (1939) Malice in Wonderland (1940) The Case of the Abominable Snowman (1941) Minute for Murder (1947) Head of a Traveller (1949) The Dreadful Hollow (1953) The Whisper in the Gloom (1954) A Tangled Web (1956) BR End of Chapter (1957) A Penknife in my Heart (1958) BR The Widow’s Cruise (1959) The Worm of Death (1961) The Deadly Joker (1963) BR The Sad Variety (1964) The Morning After Death (1966) The Private Wound (1968) BR French: Librairie des Champs Elvées (There’s Trouble Brewing) German: Elsinor Verlag (A Penknife in my Heart) Italian: Mondadori (The Dreadful Hollow; A Question of Proof), Marco Polillo Editore (The Beast Must Die) Spanish: Emecé Editores (Minute for Murder), RBA Libros (The Beast Must Die) Japanese: Hayakawa (Head of a Traveller) Russian: AST (End of Chapter, Head of a Traveller, Minute for Murder, The Deadly Joker) US: Rue Morgue Press (Question of Proof; Thou Shell of Death) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 21 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MONICA DICKENS CHARLES DICKENS BICENTENARY 2012 Part of Bloomsbury Reader “It is life itself that is caught up in the pages of her books” – Rebecca West ONE PAIR OF HANDS Monica was born in London in 1915, the greatgranddaughter of Charles Dickens. While her father and grandfather pursued the legal profession which was Charles Dickens first career, his great-granddaughter followed in his literary steps. Her light and witty novels became hugely popular in their time for being ‘funny, poignant and perfect period pieces’ (The Sunday Telegraph). By many horse-loving children Monica Dickens will be remembered as the creator of Follyfoot a popular ITV series in the early 70s. It formed the base for the subsequent children’s books series. Monica Dickens’ first novel, published in 1939, draws on her experience as a cook and general servant. With humour and pointed commentary she portrays the delicate and ongoing war between the wealthy and their servants. ONE PAIR OF FEET In this follow up to One Pair of Hands, Monica Dickens recounts her experiences as a trainee nurse during the Second World War. BIBLIOGRAPHY One Pair Of Hands (1939) Mariana (1940) One Pair Of Feet (1942) The Fancy (1943) BR Thursday Afternoons (1945) The Happy Prisoner (1946) BR Yours Sincerely (1947) Joy and Josephine (1948)BR Flowers on the Grass (1949) BR My Turn To Make The Tea (1951) No More Meadows (1953) BR The Winds of Heaven (1955) The Angel in the Corner (1956) BR Man Overboard (1958) BR The Heart of London (1961) BR Cobbler’s Dream (1963) The Room Upstairs (1964) Kate and Emma (1965) BR The Landlord’s Daughter (1968) The Listeners (1970) BR Talking of Horses (1973) Last Year When I Was Young (1974) An Open Book A Celebration (1978) A View From The Seesaw (1986) Dear Doctor Lily (1988) BR Enchantment (1989) BR Closed at Dusk (1990) BR Scarred (1991) One of the Family (1993) BR RIGHTS SOLD UK: Ebury Press (One Pair of Hands), Virago (One Pair of Feet) Italian: Astoria (Winds of Heaven) MY TURN TO MAKE THE TEA In this semi-autobiographical story set in the early 1950s, Poppy is the junior reporter on the Downingham Post, where it is always her turn to make the tea. Poppy promises her acrobat friend Maimie that she will write a supportive review of the local Christmas pantomime. But all does not go according to plan... Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 22 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION C.S. FORESTER— Part of Bloomsbury Reader “I recommend Forester to every literate I know” – Ernest Hemingway THE PURSUED Marjorie had never seen a dead body until she got home one tranquil summer evening and found her sister Dot lying on the kitchen floor in a pretty dress, with her head in the oven. She looked peaceful, as if she was asleep. Their mother suspects, however, that Dot’s death was far from natural. What’s more, she knows who the killer is – and she is determined to make him suffer. So slowly and meticulously, she plots her revenge. After all, who would suspect a neatly dressed, greyhaired widow of anything? And what could possibly go wrong? The Pursued, C. S. Forester’s dark, twisted tale of murder, lust and retribution, was written in 1935, but its typescript manuscript was lost. More than six decades later, it has been rediscovered and is now published for the first time. It is a novel years ahead of its time; rewriting the traditions of crime fiction to create a gripping psychological portrayal of obsession, jealousy, torment and the grim underside of suburban London life. Penguin will be publishing The Pursued, Payment Deferred and Plain Murder in November 2011. Cecil Scott Forester was the pen name of Cecil Louis Troughton Smith, who rose to fame with tales of adventure and military crusades. His most notable works were The African Queen and the eleven-book Horatio Hornblower series, about naval warfare during the Napoleonic era. His novels A Ship of the Line and Flying Colours were jointly awarded the 1938 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction. PLAIN MURDER PAYMENT DEFERRED Mr Marble is in serious debt, desperate for money to pay his family’s bills, until the combination of a wealthy relative, a bottle of Cyanide and a shovel offer him the perfect solution. In fact, his troubles are only just beginning. Slowly, the Marble family becomes poisoned by guilt, and caught in an increasingly dangerous trap of secrets, fear and blackmail. Then, in a final twist of the knife, Mrs Marble ensures that retribution comes in the most unexpected of ways ... At the Universal Advertising Agency on the Strand, London, a murder is being planned. Three men have been discovered taking bribes and face the grim prospect of the dole queue, unless they can get rid of the person who caught them. Their ringleader, thick-set and vicious Mr Morris, soon discovers that killing is far easier than he thought – and that he even has a talent for it. He might, he feels, be superhuman. But as he will discover, there is no such thing as the perfect crime, and no deed goes unpunished. 23 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE HORNBLOWER SERIES This series of eleven novels tells the story of Horatio Hornblower, a fictional Royal Navy officer. Starting with an unpromising beginning as a seasick midshipman, as the Napoleonic Wars progress he gains promotion steadily thanks to his skill and daring, despite his initial poverty and lack of influential friends. Eventually, after surviving many adventures in a wide variety of locales, he rises to the pinnacle of his profession, promoted to Admiral of the Fleet, knighted as a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, and named the 1st Baron Hornblower. BIBLIOGRAPHY RIGHTS SOLD UK: Penguin (Hornblower Series, The Pursued, Payment Deferred, Plain Murder) French: Editions Libella (Hornblower series), Editions Phebus (Hornblower series)Place des Editeurs (The Good Shepherd; Sink the Bismarck; African Queen; Brown on Resolution) German: Patmos (audio rights to The African Queen), Unionsverlag (Book rights: The Adrican Queen), DTV (The Pursued, Payment Deferred, Plain Murder) Greek: Metaichmio Publishers (The Pursued) Hebrew: Opus Press (The Happy Return (US title Beat to Quarters), A Ship of the Line) Italian: Mattioli (The African Queen), RCS (The Admiral Hornblower Omnibus) Lithuanian: Tyto Alba (Mr Midshipman Hornblower) Norwegian: Aschehoug (Lord Hornblower, Lieutenant Hornblower) Polish: Remi (The Happy Return, A Ship of the Line, Flying Colours, The Hornblower Series) Portuguese: Saida de Emergencia (Mr Midshipman Hornblower) Spanish: Emecé Editores (Payment Deferred), Edhasa (The Happy Return, A Ship of the Line, Flying Colours, The Commodore, Lord Hornblower, Hornblower and the Atropos, Admiral Hornblower and the West Indies, Hornblower and the Hotspur), RBA Libros S A (The Pursued) Swedish: B Wahlströms (Lieutenant Hornblower, Hornblower and the Hotspur) Russian: Vectie (11 Hornblower titles) US: Little Brown (Hornblower series), Readers Digest (Payment Deferred) The Hornblower Series Mr. Midshipman Hornblower (1950) Hornblower and the Widow McCool (1967, short story) Lieutenant Hornblower (1952) Hornblower and the Hotspur (1962) Hornblower and the Crisis (1967, unfinished novel and short stories) Hornblower and the Atropos (1953) The Happy Return (1937) A Ship of the Line (1938) Flying Colours (1938) The Commodore (1945) Lord Hornblower (1946) Hornblower in the West Indies (1958) The Last Encounter (1967, short story) Hornblower, One More Time (1979) General Fiction A Pawn Among Kings (1924) The Paid Piper (1924) Payment Deferred (1926) Love Lies Dreaming (1927) The Wonderful Week (1927) The Shadow of the Hawk (1928) Brown on Resolution (1929) Plain Murder (1930) Two-and-Twenty (1931) Death to the French (1932) The Gun (1933) The Peacemaker (1934) BR The African Queen (1935) The General (1936) To the Indies (1940) The Earthly Paradise (1940) The Captain from Connecticut (1941) The Ship (1943) The Bedchamber Mystery (1944) The Sky and the Forest (1948) Randall and the River of Time (1950) The Good Shepherd (1955) Sink the Bismarck (1959) The Nightmare (1954) The Man in the Yellow Raft (1969) Gold from Crete (1970) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 24 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION NICOLAS FREELING– part of Bloomsbury Reader RECENT SIGNING “Freeling is the only British novelist of consequence to have tackled modern Europe” - Daily Telegraph VAN DER VALK SERIES Inspector van der Valk, irascible yet sophisticated Dutch super sleuth, traverses Europe solving political intrigues and international affairs, he is master of subtle interrogation with a soft spot for hard luck cases. Love in Amsterdam (1962) Because of the Cats (1963) Gun Before Butter (1963) Double-Barrel (1964) BR Criminal Conversation (1965) BR The King of the Rainy Country (1966) BR Strike Out Where Not Applicable (1967) Tsing-Boum! (1969) The Lovely Ladies (1971) A Long Silence (1972) BR Sand Castles (1989) The Widow (1979) One Damn Thing After Another (1981) Nicolas Freeling (March 3, 1927 – July 20, 2003), was a British crime novelist, best known as the author of the van der Valk series of detective novels. Freeling's The King of the Rainy Country received a 1967 Edgar Award, from the Mystery Writers of America, for Best Novel. He also won the Gold Dagger of the Crime Writers' Association, and France's Grand Prix de Littérature Policière. In 1968 his novel Love in Amsterdam was adapted as the film Amsterdam Affair directed by Gerry O'Hara and starring Wolfgang Kieling as van Der Valk. RIGHTS SOLD: UK and US: Arcadia (Some Day Tomorrow; Because of the Cats; Janeites; The Village Book) Other novels Valparaiso (1964) The Dresden Green (1966) This is the Castle (1968) Gadget (1977) A City Solitary (1984) One More River (1998) Some Day Tomorrow (1999) The Janeites (2002) HENRI CASTANG SERIES Henri Castang is a Brussels based ex-policeman working as an investigator for the European Community. A Dressing of Diamonds (1974) What are the Bugles Blowing For? (1975) Sabine (1976) The Night Lords (1978) Castang's City (1980) Wolfnight (1982) The Back of the North Wind (1983) No Part in Your Death (1984) Cold Iron (1986) Lady Macbeth (1988) Not as Far as Velma (1989) Those in Peril (1990) Flanders Sky (1992) "You Who Know"(1994) The Seacoast of Bohemia (1994) A Dwarf Kingdom (1996) Non-fiction The Kitchen (1970) Cook Book (1972) Criminal Convictions (1994) The Village Book (2001) The Kitchen and the Cook (2002) 25 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BECAUSE OF THE CATS LOVE IN AMSTERDAM Bloemendaal aan Zee, that smugly prosperous little seaside town, has more television sets per capita than anywhere else in Holland. Even its drunks are polite, its houses uniformly tidy and sparkling clean. Alluring, unstable, and frantically self-absorbed, Elsa de Charmoy was a dangerous woman, and now she’s a dead one, shot with a gun bought by her former lover. Sulking in an Amsterdam jail, he swears it’s been years since he saw Elsa, but Inspector van der Valk isn’t quite ready to be persuaded.. But there’s something very wrong with the kids. The most popular teenagers have formed a gang that is preying, with increasing viciousness, on nearby Amsterdam—Inspector van der Valk’s patch. Van der Valk has no love for chilly, yuppified Bloemendaal. But his curiosity is as voracious as his appetite for good food. And while his colleagues just want the attacks stopped, van der Valk can’t help asking what it is about the town that has turned Bloemendaal’s children into monsters Like Inspector Maigret (to whom he is often compared), van der Valk tends to pick apart the details, ideally over a good meal. And while van der Valk’s ruminations may frustrate his more action-minded colleagues, they inevitably yield a surprising resolution. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 26 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION CLEMENT FREUD Sir Clement Raphael Freud (24 April 1924 – 15 April 2009) was an English broadcaster, writer, politician and chef. He was the grandson of psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud and the brother of artist Lucian Freud. Freud was one of Britain’s first “celebrity chefs”, having worked at the Dorchester Hotel, and went on to run his own restaurant in Sloane Square at a relatively young age. As well as this, he had various newspaper and magazine columns, and was later a familiar face on television for his appearance in a series of dog food commercials (at first for Minced Morsels, later Chunky Meat) in which he costarred with a bloodhound called Henry (played by a number of dogs) which shared his trademark “hangdog” expression. In 1968, he wrote the children’s book Grimble, followed by a sequel, Grimble at Christmas, six years later. BIBLIOGRAPHY Grimble (1968) – illustrated by Quentin Blake Grimble at Christmas (1973) – illustrated by Quentin Blake Freud on Food (1978) Clicking Vicky (1980) The Book of Hangovers (1981) – 1982 paperback version illustrated by Bill Tidy Below the Belt (1983) No one Else Has Complained (1988) The Gourmet’s Tour of Great Britain and Ireland (1989) Freud Ego (2001) Freud on Course – The Racing Lives of Clement Freud (2009) Whilst running a nightclub he met a newspaper editor who gave him a job as a sports journalist. From there he became an award-winning food and drink writer. He was Liberal Member of Parliament for the Isle of Ely constituency (later North East Cambridgeshire) from 1973 to 1987. On his election, he was hailed as the first Jewish Liberal MP for decades (though he had become Anglican at the time of his marriage). His departure from Parliament was marked by the award of a knighthood. For many, Freud was best known as a panellist on the long-running Radio 4 show Just a Minute, in which his deadpan delivery was popular with audiences. Freud died without resolving a feud with his brother Lucian, thought to have dated back 70 years, over which of them was the rightful winner of a boyhood race. Freud performed a small monologue for the Wings 1973 album Band on the Run and appeared on the album’s cover. In 1974, he was elected Rector of the University of Dundee and served two three-year terms. A generation later, in 2002, he was elected Rector of the University of St Andrews, beating feminist and academic Germaine Greer and local challenger Barry Joss, holding the position for one term. He appeared as a panellist on the comedy gameshows Shooting Stars (in 2002) and Have I Got News For You (in 2001 and 2003). Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 27 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION LEONARD GRIBBLE NEW SIGNING Leonard Gribble wrote under several pseudonyms: Leo Grex, Louis Grey, Piers Marlow, Sterry Browning, Dexter Muir and Bruce Sanders. He also wrote some Westerns, under the name of Landon Grant. He also wrote under his own name. Born in 1908 he had one leading character, Superintendent Anthony Slade. His first novel was published in 1929. He wrote crime football based mysteries. The Arsenal Stadium Mystery was made into a film in 1939. He also wrote non-fiction true crime and was a criminologist. Such examples of titles are Notorious Killers in the Night, Such Lethal Ladies, Compelled to Kill. THE ARSENAL STADIUM MYSTERY A well-known amateur football drops dead shortly after half-time in a match between Arsenal Football Club and top amateur side The Trojans in front of 70,000 spectators-every one a witness to murder. Inspector Anthony Slade of Scotland Yard arrives at the Arsenal Stadium to investigate and is immediately faced with two questions: Who was the mysterious girl who inquired after the murdered player at the end of the match and who was the last person to leave the visiting team's dressing-room? The key to the mystery is buried in the records of another football club and in the background of another mysterious death. Inspector Slade and his assistant, the reliable but not altogether bright, Sergeant Clinton, travel far and wide and find themselves with no shortage of likely suspects. Slade gradually pieces the puzzle together before finally catching his man with a lot of good old fashioned policework and a sneaky trick. RIGHTS SOLD: UK: GCR Books Ltd (The Arsenal Stadium Mystery) Italian: Marco Polillo Editore (The Yellow Bungalow Mystery) 28 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Detective Bibliography The Case of the Marsden Rubies (1929) The Gillespie Suicide Mystery (1929) The Grand Modena Murder (1930) Is this Revenge (1931) aka The Serpentine Murder The Stolen Home Secretary (1932) aka The Stolen Statesman The Secret of Tangles (1933) The Yellow Bungalow (1933) The Death Chime (1934) The Riddle of the Ravens (1934) Mystery at Tudor Arches (1935) The Case of the Malverne Diamonds (1936) Riley of the Special Branch (1936) Who Killed Oliver Cromwell? (1937) The Case Book of Anthony Slade (1937) Tragedy in E Flat (1938) The Arsenal Stadium Mystery (1939) Atomic Murder (1947) Hangman's Moon (1950) They Kidnapped Stanley Matthews (1950) The Frightened Chameleon (1950) Mystery Manor (1951) The Glass Alibi (1952) The Velvet Mask (1952) Murder Out of Season (1952) She Died Laughing (1953) Murder Mistaken (1953) with Janet Green The Inverted Crime (1954) Sally of Scotland Yard (1954) with Geraldine Laws Death Pays the Piper (1956) Superintendent Slade Investigates (1956) Stand In for Murder (1957) Don't Argue with Death (1959) Wantons Die Hard (1961) Heads You Die (1964) The Violent Dark (1965) Strip Tease Macabre (1967) A Diplomat Dies (1969) Alias the Victim (1971) Programmed for Death (1973) You Can't Die Tomorrow (1975) Midsummer Slay Ride (1976) Crime on Her Hands (1977) 29 Death Needs No Alibi (1979) Dead End in Mayfair (1981) The Dead Don't Scream (1983) as Leo Grex The Tragedy at Draythorpe Hutchinson (1931) The Nightborn (1931) The Lonely Inn Mystery (1933) The Madison Murder (1933) The Man from Manhattan (1934) Murder in the Sanctuary (1934) Crooner's Swan Song (1935) Stolen Death (1936) Transatlantic Trouble (1937) The Carlent Manor Crime (1939) The Black Out Murders (1940) The Stalag Mites (1947) King Spiv (1948) Crooked Sixpence (1949) Ace of Danger (1952) Thanks for the Felony (1958) Larceny in Her Heart (1959) Terror Wears a Smile (1962) The Brass Knuckle (1964) Violent Keepsake (1967) The Hard Kill (1969) Kill Now Pay Later (1971) Die as in Murder (1974) Death Throws No Shadow (1976) Mix Me a Murder (1978) Hot Ice (1983) As Louis Grey The Signet of Death (1934) As Dexter Muir The Pilgrims Meet Murder (1948) The Speckled Swan (1949) Rosemary for Death (1953) As Sterry Browning Crime at Cape Folly (1951) Sex Marks the Spot (1954) GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION JANE AIKEN HODGE—Part of Bloomsbury Reader RECENT SIGNING BIBLIOGRAPHY Non-fiction Jane Aiken Hodge was born near Cambridge, Massachusetts to Pulitzer prize-winning poet Conrad Aiken and his first wife, the writer Jessie McDonald. Her works of fiction include historical novels and contemporary detective novels with over 30 titles. REBEL HEIRESS Henrietta was no one's enemy. She came to London from Boston in search of her father— a father thought lost to her until she discovered her aunt's treachery. Now armed with her mother's marriage papers, she set sail for England to prove her identity and, unknowingly, to gain a fortune—and a love—she had never dreamed of. Only a Novel: The Double Life of Jane Austen (1972) The Private World of Georgette Heyer, Arrow Books (1984) Passion and Principle: Loves And Lives of Regency Women (1996) Fiction Marry in Haste (1961) Maulever Hall (1963) The Adventurers aka Royal Gamble (U.S.) (1965) Watch the Wall My Darling (1966) Here Comes a Candle aka The Master of Penrose (U.S.) (1967) The Winding Stair (1968) Greek Wedding (1970) Savannah Purchase (1970) Strangers in Company (1973) BR Shadow of a Lady (1973) One Way to Venice (1974) Rebel Heiress (1975) BR Runaway Bride (1976) Judas Flowering (1976) BR Red Sky At Night aka Red Sky at Night, Lovers’ Delight (U.S.) (1977) Last Act (1979) Wide Is the Water (1981) BR The Lost Garden (1982) Secret Island (1985) Polonaise (1987) BR First Night (1989) Leading Lady (1990) BR Windover (1992) Escapade (1993) Whispering (1995) Bride of Dreams (1996) Unsafe Hands (1997) Susan in America (1998) Caterina (1999) A Death in Two Parts (2000) BR Deathline (2003) THE ADVENTURERS During the Napoleonic wars Sonia van Hugel's family is murdered while she hides in the hayloft. She dresses as a boy to travel to her aunt's home across Austria. She meets a gambler who befriends her and keeps her identity safe while they travel together across an increasingly dangerous country. 30 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION RALPH HAMMOND INNES—Part of Bloomsbury Reader RECENT SIGNING “A master story-teller” – Daily Telegraph NEW UK PUBLISHER—VINTAGE: JULY 2013 TO TIE IN WITH CENTENARY THE WRECK OF THE MARY DEARE The Mary Deare was a 6000-ton freighter, which for forty years had tramped the seas, been shipwrecked and torpedoed during the war. Then one night she emerges from the Bay of Biscay after severe gales and is propelled into the newspaper headlines as a ship of mystery and tragedy. Ralph Hammond Innes was a British novelist who wrote over 30 novels, as well as children’s and travel books. In WWII he served in the Royal Artillery, eventually rising to the rank of Major. Unusually for the thriller genre, Innes' protagonists were often not "heroes" in the typical sense, but ordinary men suddenly thrust into extreme situations by circumstance. DELTA CONNECTION The first killing occurs in Constantza, the Romanian seaport on the Black Sea, but the next death happens a world away. At the heart of this thriller is the search for a missing woman - Vikki, the beautiful, adopted daughter of a dissident journalist. CAMPBELL’S KINGDOM Bruce Campbell Wetheral has apparently no future, but suddenly finds himself the sole beneficiary under his grandfather's will. Stuart Campbell had been an aggressive and obstinate old man convinced that oil could be found in the Rocky Mountains. Now his grandson decides to take up the challenge. But time is against him -- the time to live, the time to vindicate his grandfather's obsession, and time to save the land itself from impending disaster. RIGHTS SOLD: UK: Vintage (Four titles to be printed traditionally and E book/POD: Campbell’s Kingdom, The Wreck of the Mary Deare, Wreckers Must Breathe and The Lonely Skier; 10 titles as E book/POD) 31 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION CENTENARY YEAR IN 2013 BIBLIOGRAPHY THE LAND GOD GAVE TO CAIN Novels The Doppelganger (1937) Air Disaster (1937) Sabotage Broadcast (1938) All Roads Lead to Friday (1939) The Trojan Horse (1940) BR Wreckers Must Breathe (1940) Attack Alarm (1941) Dead or Alive (1946) Killer Mine (1947) The Lonely Skier (1947) The Blue Ice (1948) Maddon’s Rock (1948) The White South (1949) The Angry Mountain (1950) BR Air Bridge (1951) Campbell’s Kingdom (1952) The Strange Land (1954) The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1956) The Land God Gave to Cain (1958) The Doomed Oasis (1960) Atlantic Fury (1962) The Strode Venturer (1965) Levkas Man (1971) Golden Soak (1973) North Star (1975) The Big Footprints (1977) The Last Voyage: Captain Cook’s Lost Diary (1978) Solomons Seal (1980) The Black Tide (1982) High Stand (1985) Medusa (1988) BR Isvik (1991) Target Antarctica (1993) Delta Connection (1996) Ian Ferguson alone held the key to the disaster that had overtaken a geological survey team more than two thousand miles away. What drove him now to make the perilous journey through the savage, lonely wastes of Labrador to the scene of the disaster? And what was the link between this and similar events which had taken place in that same territory fifty years earlier? WRECKERS MUST BREATHE A classic wartime novel set in Cornwall where, below the cliffs, a fleet of German U-boats lie hidden. Their target is the merchantmen and their ships, the lifeline of wartime Britain. Journalist Walter Craig, who is holidaying in the area, becomes entangled in the events going on around him. “Absolutely first-class… magnificently maintained suspense.” – Dennis Wheatley on WRECKERS MUST BREATHE Books for children (as Ralph Hammond) Cocos Gold (1950) Isle of Strangers (1951) Saracen’s Tower (1952) Black Gold on the Double Diamond (1953) Nonfiction Harvest of Journeys (1962) Scandinavia (1963) Sea and Islands (1967) The Conquistadors (1969) BR Australia (1971) East Anglia (1986) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 32 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MARGARET IRWIN—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “She converts the small and familiar dullness of life into laughter” – The Times THE ELIZABETH TRILOGY Margaret Irwin beautifully recreates the life of the vivacious Princess Elizabeth, the girl who will one day be Queen. But Elizabeth's path to power is fraught with danger: from the execution of her mother, Anne Boleyn, through her troubled childhood in the court of the venal and unpredictable Henry VIII and the religious terror of "Bloody Mary", she must struggle against all odds just to survive. Irwin was born in London, England, and educated at Clifton High School in Bristol, and at Oxford University. She began writing books and short stories in the early 1920s. She married children's author and illustrator John Robert Monsell in 1929. Psychologically rich, meticulously researched and delightfully realized, the Elizabeth trilogy is an unmissable classic of the historical genre. Her novels were esteemed for the accuracy of their historical research, and she became a noted authority on the Elizabethan and early Stewart era. One of her novels, YOUNG BESS, about the early years of Queen Elizabeth 1, was made into a movie starring Jean Simmonds. THE GALLIARD The young and trusting Mary, Queen of Scots, is sailing home to her kingdom after years in exile. The danger from her cousin, the English Queen, has not lessened since then. Religious divides threaten to tear the nation apart and, across the border, Elizabeth. Amid the furious turmoil and uncertainty in her Scottish kingdom, Mary finds she has one loyal servant - James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, a 'glorious, rash and hazardous young man' known to all as the Galliard. In Bothwell's courage and love for her, Mary finds serenity, and though fate works against them, no force can conquer their spirit. This stunning novel breathes new life into the littleknown story of the great love of Mary, Queen of Scots. 33 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY STILL SHE WISHED FOR COMPANY The story moves between the 1920s and the 1770s, following two heroines: 20th century Jan Challard, a London girl, and 18th century Juliana Clare, the youngest daughter of an aristocratic Berkshire family. Jan is independent and spirited, but leads a humdrum life, working in an office, and walks out with a very suitable young man. Juliana, at 17 years of age, is getting the upbringing of a young lady in the enormous family mansion, Chidleigh, and her life is devoid of excitement and event. The two heroines can see one another from time to time, momentarily, through some rent in the fabric of time, but never manage to meet and interact. Their lives converge as Juliana’s world is turned upside down; her father dies and her notoriously wicked and mysterious brother, Lucian Clare, returns to take his position as head of the family. Lucian recognizes a supernatural power in Juliana, and uses this to reach out to Jan through the ages. General Fiction Still She Wished for Company (1924) BR These Mortals (1925) Knock Four Times (1927) BR Fire Down Below (1928) Royal Flush: A Royal Cinderella (1932) BR The Stranger Prince: The Story of Rupert of the Rhine (1938) The Bride: The Story of Louise And Montrose (1939) The Gay Galliard: The Story of Mary Queen of Scots (1941) Later published as The Galliard. Royal Flush: The Story of Minette (1948) The Proud Servant: A Story of Montrose (1949) BR The Heart's Memory (1951) Hidden Splendour (1952) None So Pretty: Or, the Story of Mr. Cork (1953) Queen Elizabeth Trilogy Young Bess (1944) Elizabeth, Captive Princess (1948) Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain (1953) Short Stories Bloodstock and Other Stories (1953) BR Biography That Great Lucifer: A Portrait of Sir Walter Raleigh (1960) RIGHTS SOLD UK: Allison & Busby (Young Bess, Elizabeth, Captive Princess, Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain, The Galliard) US: Source Books (The Elizabeth Trilogy) Spanish: Alba Editorial (Elizabeth, Captive Princess) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 34 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION STORM JAMESON—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Tension between the fantastic and the real, between self-invention and the bedrock of fact, is characteristic of her writing” - Times Higher Education THE INTRUDER Margaret Storm Jameson (1891-1986) was a prolific English writer of novels and criticism. Born in Whitby, Yorkshire, she studied at the University of Leeds before moving to London, where she earned an MA from King’s College London in 1914. She then went on to teach before becoming a fulltime writer. She married Guy Chapman, also a writer, but continued to publish under Storm Jameson. She was president of the International PEN Association from 1939, and active in helping refugee writers. She unlocked a door and pointed to the stone flight, going steeply and slyly into a pit…Four squat dirty columns held up the roof; there was a primitive stone altar…and there was also a smell. A peculiar disquieting smell…a stench of decay or corruption, that pressed on eyes, nose and throat like a suffocating hand, or like a wall in which you are being bricked up. A novel about obsession, hate and the mystery of human cruelty, and the story about a young woman caught up in a loveless marriage. LOVE IN WINTER It is six years since the end of the Great War. For Hervey Russell, the years of peace should be bright, her growing literary repute paving the way for membership to London’s Literary Society. But her career is insufficient, and life with an unloving husband makes her long for a new beginning. Her cousin Nicholas, shattered by the war, thinks his life is over, until he meets Hervey. 35 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION Triumph of Time series The Lovely Ship (1927) BR Richer Dust (1930) The Voyage Home (1931) BIBLIOGRAPHY Fiction The Pot Boils (1919) The Happy Highways (1920) The Clash (1922) Lady Susan and Life: An Indiscretion (1923) The Pitiful Wife (1923) Three Kingdoms (1926) Farewell to Youth (1928) The Georgian Novel and Mr. Robinson (1929) The Single Heart (1932) A Day Off (1933) BR Company Parade (1934) BR Mirror in Darkness (1934) Love in Winter (1934) None Turn Back (1936) BR The Moon is Making (1937) Delicate Monsters (1937) Here Comes a Candle (1938) Farewell Night, Welcome Day (1939) Civil Journey The End of This War (1941) The Fort (1941) Then We Shall Hear Singing: A Fantasy in C Major (1942) Cloudless May (1943) BR The Journal of Mary Hervey Russell 1945) The Other Side (1946) BR Before the Crossing (1947) The Black Laurel (1947) BR The Moment Of Truth (1949) BR The Green Man (1952) The Intruder (1956) The Aristide Case (1964) BR The Early Life of Stephen Hind (1966) The White Crow (1968) BR There Will Be A Short Interval (1973) BR A Cup of Tea for Mr. Thorgill (1957) BR A Ulysses Too Many (1958) The Last Score (1961) The Road from the Monument (1962) BR A Month Soon Goes (1962) Collections That Was Yesterday (1932) Women Against Men (1933) A Day Off (1933) Drama Modern Drama in Europe (1920) The Hidden River (1954) Non-Fiction The Decline of Merry England (1930) No Time Like the Present (1933) Challenge to Death (1935) In the Second Year (1936) The Novel in Contemporary Life (1938) Europe to Let (1940) Cousin Honore (1940) London Calling : A Salute to America (1942) The Writer's Situation (1950) Morley Roberts: The Last Eminent Victorian (1961) Journey from the North (1969) BR Parthian Words (1970) BR Speaking of Stendhal (1979) BR Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 36 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION H.R.F. KEATING - WINNER OF TWO GOLD DAGGER AWARDS—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “My own preference is for…those beautiful little classics by the former crime fiction reviewer of this newspaper, H.R.F. Keating. The Inspector Ghote books…are quite exquisite, gentle novels that should find their place on any list of good crime fiction.” – The Times INSPECTOR GHOTE BREAKS AN EGG In a small, provincial town in the heart of India, a politician's wife has done her husband's career a great service, by dying under suspicious circumstances. That the corpse and the trail have been cold for fifteen years hasn't saved Inspector Ghote of the Bombay CID from being sent to investigate. But what chance does he have when his chief suspect is so powerful, when the whole district is against him, and when a holy man is fasting to the death to protest his prying? But still the good inspector dutifully goes, carrying just the honour of his police force and a box of double-sized eggs... UNDER A MONSOON CLOUD H. R. F. Keating was born at St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, in 1926. He went to Merchant Taylors, leaving early to work in the engineering department of the BBC. After a period of service in the army, which he describes as 'totally undistinguished', he went to Trinity College, Dublin, where he became a scholar in modern languages. He was also the crime books reviewer for The Times for fifteen years. His first novel about Inspector Ghote, The Perfect Murder, won the Gold Dagger of the Crime Writers Association and an Edgar Allen Poe Special Award. H.R.F. Keating is best known for his Inspector Ghote series. Ganesh Ghote is an inspector in the Bombay Police who has appeared in twenty-four novels. The first was The Perfect Murder (1964), which won a Crime Writer’s Association Gold Dagger. It was later made into a film by Merchant Ivory. Inspector Ghote’s First Case was published as the prequel to The Perfect Murder in 2008. The most recent novel is A Small Case for Inspector Ghote, published in 2009. Penguin has re-issued four Inspector Ghote novels in April 2011 in the UK: Inspector Ghote Breaks an Egg, Under a Monsoon Cloud, Inspector Ghote Trusts the Heart, and The Perfect Murder. H. R. F. Keating died in March 2011, in London. What had until recently been a police sergeant is now lying at Ghote's feet bleeding its last. An accident it may have been, but Ghote saw exactly what happened, and it's his duty to arrest the killer. Isn't it? Or can the inspector better serve his beloved police force by disposing of the body, by concealing a crime? And if he does, will he manage to keep his terrible secret? As an Inquiry begins beneath the first torrents of monsoon rain - will he even want to? INSPECTOR GHOTE TRUSTS THE HEART Some crooks have tried to snatch the plump son of a business tycoon, and have accidentally made off with his playmate instead. But they're not changing their plan: a payment is to be delivered to them or a small corpse is to be delivered to Inspector Ghote. But what kind of ransom can a mere tailor's boy demand? And, as something more unpleasant than just a ransom note arrives from the kidnappers, are the police helping keep the boy in one piece? THE PERFECT MURDER In the house of Lala Varde, a vast man of even greater influence, an attack has taken place. Varde's secretary, Mr Perfect, has been struck on his invaluable business head. And try as Inspector Ghote might to remain conscientious and methodical, his investigation is beset on all sides by cunning, disdain and corruption. And then there's the impossible theft of a single rupee to be dealt with... 37 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY INSPECTOR GHOTE’S FIRST CASE In his proud new position in the prestigious Bombay Police Crime Branch, Inspector Ganesh Ghote sees his career finally take off with the prospect of only the most high-profile murders to investigate. Unfortunately the Assistant Commissioner of Police, Mr Ramprasade Divekar, has other ideas and chooses to keep Ghote busy with the interminable paperwork of Bandobast Duty. Waiting to be given his first case, Ghote doesn’t expect to find it planted in his waste bin. Wrapped in newspaper featuring the face of a prominent politician, and stuffed into an old shopping bag, there is stark evidence of a murder fitted to his capabilities. ACP Divekar dismisses the murder as plainly altogether unsuitable for a Crime Branch investigation, ordering Ghote to dispose of the evidence. Feeling that no murder should go overlooked, Ghote makes a promise to himself to investigate, risking his entire police career. But then he is suddenly given that longed-for case: the murder of a young university researcher already inefficiently investigated by the local police. It may be only a small case, but can Ghote solve it as well as keep the promise he has made to himself? Inspector Ghote Series The Perfect Murder (1964) Inspector Ghote’s Good Crusade (1966) Inspector Ghote Caught in Meshes (1967) Inspector Ghote Hunts a Peacock (1968) Inspector Ghote Plays a Joker (1969) Inspector Ghote Breaks an Egg (1970) Inspector Ghote Goes by Train (1971) Inspector Ghote Trusts the Heart (1972) Bats Fly Up for Inspector Ghote (1974) The Sheriff of Bombay (1984) Filmi, Filmi ,Inspector Ghote (1976) Inspector Ghote Draws a Line (1979) The Murder of the Maharajah (1980) Under a Monsoon Cloud (1986) The Body in the Billiard Room (1987) Dead on Time (1988) The Iciest Sin (1990) Inspector Ghote, His Life and Crimes (1989) Cheating Death (1992) Doing Wrong (1993) Asking Questions (1996) Bribery, Corruption Also (1999) Breaking and Entering (2000) Inspector Ghote’s First Case (2008) A Small Case for Inspector Ghote? (2009) Harriet Martens Series The Hard Detective (2000) A Detective in Love (2001) A Detective Under Fire (2002) The Dreaming Detective (2003) A Detective at Death's Door (2004) One Man and His Bomb (2006) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 38 Rules, Regs and Rotten Eggs (2007) Other novels Death and the Visiting Firemen (1959) BR Zen There Was Murder (1960) BR A Rush On the Ultimate (1961) The Dog It Was That Died (1962) BR Death of a Fat God (1963) Is Skin-Deep, Is Fatal (1965)BR The Strong Man (1971) BR The Underside (1974) BR Murder Must Appetize (1975) A Remarkable Case of Burglary (1975) BR Murder by Death (1976) (screenplay by Neil Simon) A Long Walk to Wimbledon (1978) BR The Governess (1983) BR Mrs. Craggs: Crimes Cleaned Up (1985) The Man of Gold (1985) (writing as Evelyn Hervey) BR Into the Valley of Death (1986) BR The Rich Detective (1993) The Good Detective (1995) The Soft Detective (1997) BR The Bad Detective (1999) BR Jack the Lady Killer (1999) Collections In Kensington Gardens Once… (1997) Non-fiction Murder Must Appetize (1975) BR Sherlock Holmes, the Man and His World (1979) Great Crimes (1982) Writing Crime Fiction (1986) Crime and Mystery: the 100 Best Books (1987) The Bedside Companion to Crime (1989) GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BERYL KINGSTON—Part of Bloomsbury Reader NEW SIGNING ‘Beryl Kingston writes with such a lovely light-handed touch it is impossible not to warm to her novels. There are some great character studies, whether of the more eccentric or the more conventional locals, and a terrific mix of mystery and romance.’ Historical Novel Review BIBLIOGRAPHY A Time to Love (1987) BR Laura's Way (1996) Tuppenny Times (1989) BR Gemma's Journey (1997) London Pride (1990) Avalanche of Daisies (1998) Sixpenny Stalls (1990) BR Only Human (2001) Fourpenny Flyer (1990) BR Kisses and Ha'pennies (1991) Beryl Kingston has been a writer since she was seven when she started producing 'poetry'. She was evacuated to Felpham at the start of WWII, igniting an interest in one time resident poet William Blake (which later inspired her novel The Gates of Paradise). She was a school teacher until 1985, but became a full-time writer when her debut novel became a bestseller. Kingston lives in west Sussex, and has three children, five grandchildren and one great grandchild. Hearts and Farthings (1991) Only Young (2001) Neptune's Daughter (2005) The Gates of Paradise (2006) Octavia (2007) War Baby (1991) Octavia's War (2009) Two Silver Crosses (1992) Girl on the Orlop Deck (2010) Maggie's Boy (1994) Alive and Kicking (1995) Off the Rails (2011) RIGHTS SOLD: GATES OF PARADISE UK: Robert Hale (Off the Rails; Girl on the Orlop Deck), Allison & Busby (Octavia’s War; Gates of Paradise; Octavia); Severn House (Only Young) TWO SILVER CROSSES The story of a mother and her daughters, war's legacy, the triumph of faith, and love's power to heal. Twin sisters, one of them blind, disappear from their Wolverhampton home in 1924. A decade later a young solicitor is sent to France and finds a mystery, a tragedy and a passionate love affair. 'My dearest Annie, I do believe I've stumbled upon a mystery concerning our William Blake...' Famous poet, engraver and illustrator, William Blake lived for three years in rural Felpham, Sussex, before he was dramatically tried for sedition in 1803, after which he returned to London, where he died in 1827. Fifty years on from Blake's residency in Felpham, biographer Alexander Gilchrist arrives in the village to research the poet's life. But why are the locals at The Fox Inn so hostile to his questions about Blake's court trial? Beryl Kingston's touching story of Alexander's search for the truth, and Blake's life in Sussex evokes the beauty of South East England and illuminates the life of a well-loved poet. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 39 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ARTHUR KOESTLER “At his best he was a masterful, clear-eyed chronicler of the world, someone who combined astonishing learning with a knack for simple, accessible exposition.” – The Observer Arthur Koestler, CBE (1905-1983) was a prolific writer of essays, novels and autobiographies. He was born into a Hungarian Jewish family in Budapest but, apart from his early school years, was educated in Austria. His early career was in journalism. In 1931 he joined the Communist Party of Germany but, disillusioned, he resigned from it in 1938 and in 1940 published a devastating antiCommunist novel, Darkness at Noon, which propelled him to instant international fame. DARKNESS AT NOON ‘One of the few books written in this epoch which will survive it.’ - New Statesman RIGHTS SOLD Brazilian: Editora Monole (Darkness at Noon) Bulgarian: Vega (The Thirteenth Tribe) Chinese: Yilin (Darkness at Noon) Czech: Vojtech Ripka (Thieves in the Night) French: Tallandier (The Thirteenth Tribe); Editions Belles Lettres (The Sleepwalker, The Ghost in the Machine, The Act of Creation) German: S Fischer (The Invisible Writing), Czenin (The Case of the Midwife Toad); Elsinor Verlag (Darkness at Noon) Greek: Editions Hatjinicoli (Scum of the Earth) Hebrew: Scales Translation and Research (The Thirteenth Tribe); Kinneret (Darkness at Noon) Hungarian: Europa (The Sleepwalkers; Darkness at Noon) Kossuth (Promise and Fulfilment: Palestine 1917–1949 ) Italian: Il Saggiatore (The Gladiators), Mondadori (Darkness at Noon), Nuova Editoriale (Twilight Bar), Libri Liberal (The Yogi and the Commissar). Mulino (Arrow in the Blue; The Invisible Writing; Dialogue with Death; Scum of the Earth), Jacabook (The Age of Longing, The Case of the Midwife Toad) Japanese: Chikuma Shobo (The Watershed, The Roots of Coincidence), Iwanami Shoten (The Case of the Midnight Toad; Darkness at Noon) Polish: Drzweo Babel (The Thirteenth Tribe) Portuguese: Editora Relume Dumara (The Gladiators, The Thirteenth Tribe) Russian: AST-Release (Age of Longing, The Call Girl, Darkness at Noon, The Thirteenth Tribe, Arrival and Departure, The Gladiators) Serbia: Prosveta (The Thirteenth Tribe) Spanish: Edhasa (The Gladiators), Amaranto (Dialogue with Death), Destino (Darkness at Noon), Random House Mondadori (The Invisible Writing, Arrow in the Blue, Darkness at Noon), Libraria SA de CV (The Sleepwalkers) Turkish: Phoenix (The Sleepwalkers), Plato Film (The Gladiators, The Thirteenth Tribe) US: Simon & Schuster (Darkness at Noon), University of Chicago N S Rubashov, an old guard Communist, falls victim to an unnamed government; with outstanding psychological insight, Koestler traces his story through arrest, imprisonment and trial in a classic novel which, when first published, famously drew attention to the true nature of Stalin’s regime. Despite the loss of the original German text, Daphne Hardy’s English translation of the novel, published in London in 1940, has become an international classic and has profoundly affected how history remembers the Moscow Show Trials. THE GLADIATORS ‘One of the very few novelists who attacks the most difficult and troubling issues of private and public morality and who, having raised serious questions, never tries to satisfy us with ready-made answers or evasions.’ – Saul Bellow Koestler’s first novel, set in the late Roman Republic, tells the story of the revolt of Spartacus and man’s search for Utopia. The first of three novels concerned with the ‘ethics of revolution’, it addresses the ageold debate of whether the end justifies the means, an argument continued in his classic novels, Darkness at Noon and Arrival and Departure. Translation Rights Contact: ILA (Intercontinental Literary Agency) 40 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ERIC LINKLATER—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Eric Linklater is not primarily a novelist, or an essayist or a dramatist. He is above all else an enchanting prose poet. These fragments of wonderful singing prose are scattered all over his books, and through them English literature is permanently enriched.” – George Mackay Brown POET’S PUB Eric Linklater (1899–1974) wrote scores of novels for adults and children. He was also a journalist in India, commander of a wartime fortress in the Orkney Islands, and rector of Aberdeen University. In Linklater's Poet's Pub, a rhyme-spinner named Saturday Keith assumes control of a rustic inn. All Keith wants is a little peace and quiet so that he can write his poems without interruption. Alas, his little Pub becomes a veritable Grand Central Station for a wide variety of eccentrics, ranging from absentminded professors to bumbling crooks. Stealing the show is the peerless Joyce Grenfell as a toothy patroness of the arts. Poet's Pub has no real plot to speak of, just a series of vignettes unified by a central BIBLIOGRAPHY Fiction White Maa’s Saga (1929) Poet’s Pub (1929) The Men of Ness (1932) The Crusader’s Key (1933) The Impregnable Women (1938) BR Judas (1939) A Spell for Old Bones (1949) BR The Dark of Summer (1956) BR A Sociable Plover and other Stories and Conceits (1957) A Man Over Forty (1963) A Terrible Freedom (1966)BR The Wind on the Moon (1944) The Pirates in the Deep Green Sea (1949) BR Non-Fiction Juan in America (1931) Magnus Merriman (1934) Juan in China Ben Jonson and King James: Biography and Portrait (1931) Ripeness is All (1935) The Man on My Back (1941) Private Angelo (1946) Laxdale Hall (1951) Figures in a Landscape (1952) A Year of Space (1953) The Merry Muse (1959) BR The Survival of Scotland (1968) The Campaign in Italy The Highland Division The Northern Garrisons (1941) Drama The Devil’s in the News (1929) RIGHTS SOLD UK: Vintage (Wind on the Moon) UK & US: Penguin (Poet’s Pub) PRIVATE ANGELO The novel covers the (mis)adventures of an Italian soldier during World War II. The offspring of an English father and an Italian mother, the eponymous main character of the novel finds himself unwillingly drafted into the Italian army, with Count Pontefiore, Commanding Officer of the 914th Regiment of Tuscan Infantry, as his colonel. Not only is the Count Angelo's patron, but he was also a former lover of Angelo's mother. The novel opens with the Italian armistice of 1943, and traces the fortunes of Angelo as he seeks to survive and regain a measure of control over his life during the turmoils of the war. Though distinctly lacking in dono di coraggio (gift of courage), an annoying but life-saving characteristic, Angelo strives to maintain his cheerfulness and beautiful voice in chaotic circumstances beyond his control. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 41 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION GAVIN LYALL—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Gavin Lyall was one of the most consistent British thriller writers of the past 40 years, bringing to his books a craftsmanship and professionalism that never became formulaic. He was a master of laconic dialogue, of plotting which was satisfyingly complex and rich in double bluffs and of unobtrusively sketched, often exotic, backgrounds. Above all he was a consummate storyteller and compulsively readable.” – The Times VENUS WITH PISTOL Gavin Lyall lived in Hampstead and enjoyed sailing on the Thames in his motor cruiser. From 1959 to 1962 he was a newspaper reporter and the aviation correspondent for the Sunday Times. His first novel. The Wrong Side of the Sky, was published in 1961, drawing from his personal experiences in the Libyan Desert and in Greece. Lyall left journalism in 1963 to become a full-time author, writing 17 novels before his death in 2003. Gilbert Kemp is dealer specializing in antique guns in London with a somewhat dubious background. He is approached by the mysterious Nicaraguan Carlos MacGregor Garcia, and his employer, the very wealthy ex-professional tennis player Doña Margarita Umberto, who are travelling around Europe buying oil paintings to form a private collection, which they allege will be donated to the Nicaraguan people. Kemp’s services are needed in order to smuggle the paintings into Switzerland, from where they will be transported to Nicaragua in the diplomatic pouch. It seems like a straight-forward matter of art smuggling until Kemp is mugged and a priceless Cezanne is stolen. BLAME THE DEAD James Card loses his reputation as a bodyguard when his client, a Lloyd’s underwriter, is shot right under his nose. Determined to find out why, he begins research into the dead man’s background. But somebody doesn’t want Card to look too closely and Card and his unknown enemy track each other to remote parts of Norway for the final reckoning. 42 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE HARRY MAXIM SERIES A series of espionage thrillers originally developed for a proposed BBC TV Series, featuring Major Harry Maxim, an SAS officer assigned as a security adviser to 10 Downing Street. The pilot was directed by Alistair Reid, with a screenplay by Brian Clemens and the role of Harry Maxim was played by Charles Dance. BIBLIOGRAPHY The Harry Maxim Series The Secret Servant (1980) The Conduct of Major Maxim (1982) BR The Crocus List (1985) BR Uncle Target (1988) BR THE HONOUR SERIES Four brilliant semi-historical thrillers about the fledgling and decidedly amateur British secret service in the years leading up to the World War I. A must-read for anyone who likes classic, old-fashioned adventure stories. The Honour Series Spy’s Honour (1993) Flight From Honour (1996) All Honourable Men (1997) BR Honourable Intentions (1999) General Fiction The Wrong Side of the Sky (1961) The Most Dangerous Game (1963) BR Midnight Plus One (1965) Shooting Script (1966) Venus With Pistol (1969) BR Freedom’s Battle: The War in the Air 1939–1945 (1971) Blame the Dead (1973) BR Judas Country (1975) Non-fiction Operation Warboard: How to Fight World War II Battles in Miniature (1971) Freedom’s Battle: The War in the Air 1939-1945 Miniature: Wargaming WWII Battles in 20-25mm Scale (1972) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 43 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ROSE MACAULAY—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “She was as lively as a needle. She remained the discreet, learned and intrepid spinster of irreverent eye and rapid, muttering wit…Activity was her principle, asking questions her ironical pleasure.” – V.S. Pritchett THE TOWERS OF TREBIZOND Winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize “Take my camel, deal,” said my aunt Dot, as she climbed down from this animal on her return from High Mass. Emilie Rose Macaulay (1881–1958) was born in Rugby, Warwickshire but spent her early childhood in Italy. She was educated at Oxford High School for Girls and Somerville College, Oxford, where she read Modern History. She wrote her first novel, Abbots Verney, in 1906, while living in Great Shelford, near Cambridge. Rose became an ardent Anglo-Catholic and, through her great childhood friendship with Rupert Brooks, was introduced to London literary society. After moving to London, in 1914 published her first book of poetry, The Two Blind Countries. In 1918 she met the novelist and former Catholic priest Gerald O'Donovan, the married man with whom she was to have an affair lasting until his death. Her final and most famous novel, The Towers of Trebizond (1956), was awarded a James Tait Black Memorial Prize and became a bestseller in America. Rose Macaulay was made a Dame Commander of the British Empire in 1958, but seven months later suffered a heart attack and died at her home. So begins The Towers of Trebizond, perhaps the greatest of Rose Macaulay’s novels. In this fine and funny adventure set in the backlands of modern Turkey, a group of highly unusual travel companions makes its way from Istanbul to legendary Trebizond, encountering potion-dealing sorcerers, recalcitrant policeman, and Billy Graham on tour with a busload of Southern evangelists. Though delightfully funny throughout, the pages are shadowed by heartbreak – as the narrator confronts the spectres of ancient empires, religious turmoil, and painful memories of lost love. NON-COMBATANTS AND OTHERS This powerfully-felt pacifist novel of the First World War records the suffering and passion of Alix Sandomir’s rebellion against the foolishness of her fellow non-combatants. The year is 1915, and Alix moves from her cousin’s home in the country to the suburban villa Violette with its impervious, engrossed household. Here we meet a gallery of preoccupied characters drawn with all Rose Macaulay’s wit and observation, who for a while distract Alix from her frustrations and impotence of her position. But when she learns the truth about the death of her younger brother on the front line she becomes increasingly aware of the ineffective role of women in war. Angered by her own ineffectualness, Alix finally begins her battle for peace. 44 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY KEEPING UP APPEARANCES A highly diverting novel about a young women’s foolish efforts to make a good impression on her world. The heroine, Daphne Daisy Simpson, earns her living writing foolish romantic novels and silly gossip pieces for newspapers. As Daisy she belongs to a London suburban family of which she is ashamed. As Daphne she inhabits a world of educated and upper class people. In her inimitable witty style, Rose Macaulay lays out her heroine’s efforts to keep the two worlds and her two lives apart, whilst exploring the human psychology inbuilt into all of us who want to present ourselves in the best light. STAYING WITH RELATIONS English novelist Macaulay's early novels were noted for their wit, urbanity and mild satire. Staying with Relations begins: Catherine Gray, a young female, and, like so many other females, a novelist, went to America one autumn and lectured to its inhabitants on the Creation of Character in Fiction. Catherine was twenty-seven, but had, nevertheless, so far only published three novels, for though diligent, she wrote slowly and at length. If any should desire to know whether or not she wrote well, I can but reply that her novels pleased some tastes and not others, and that it is impossible to say more or other than this of any writings, since philosophers have unfortunately failed, down the ages to arrive at any fixed standards of merit in art. Catherine’s novels were probably quite averagely readable as novels go. Fiction Abbots Verney (1906) The Furnace (1907) The Secret River (1909) The Valley Captives (1911) Views and Vagabonds (1912) The Lee Shore (1913) The Two Blind Countries (1914) Non-Combatants and Others What Not: A Prophetic Comedy (1918) Three Days (1919) Potterism (1920) Dangerous Ages (1921) Mystery at Geneva: An improbable Tale of Singular Happening (1922) Told by an Idiot (1923) BR Orphan Island (1924) BR Crewe Train (1926) Keeping up Appearances (1928) Staying with Relations (1930) They were Defeated (1932) I Would Be Private (1937) And No Man’s Wit (1940) The World my Wilderness (1950) The Towers of Trebizond (1956) Non-Fiction A Casual Commentary (1925) Some Religious Elements in English Literature (1931) Going Abroad (1934) Milton (1934) Personal Pleasures (1935) BR The Minor Pleasures of Life (1936) An Open Letter (1937) The Writings of E.M. Forster (1938) Life Among the English (1942) Southey in Portugal (1945) Evelyn Waugh (1946) Fabled Shore: From the Pyrenees to Portugal (1949) BR Pleasure of Ruins (1953) Coming to London (1957) Letters to a Friend 1950-52 (1961) BR Last Letters to a Friend 1952-1958 (1962) Letters to a Sister (1964) BR They Went to Portugal Too (1990) RIGHTS SOLD UK: Virago (Told by an Idiot, Crewe Train), HarperCollins (The Towers of Trebizond), Capuchin Classics (Noncombatants and Others) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 45 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION DENIS MACKAIL—Part of Bloomsbury Reader NEW SIGNING THE SQUARE CIRCLE Denis Mackail was born in London on 3 June 1892. He went to Balliol College, Oxford, but failed to complete his degree through ill-health after two years. In 1917 he married Diana Granet, only child of the railway manager Sir Guy Granet, who was a directorgeneral for railways in the War Office. The couple had two children and lived in Chelsea, London. It was the necessity of supporting his young family that lead Denis to write a novel when office jobs became insecure after the end of the war. With his novel published, his first short-story accepted by the prestigious Strand Magazine and the services of a literary agent, A. P. Watt, Denis was soon earning enough from his writing to give up office work. He published a novel every year from 1920 to 1938 and among his literary friends were P. G. Wodehouse and A. A. Milne. During the 1930s Mackail lived at Bishopstone House, Bishopstone near Seaford, Sussex. Denis agreed to write the official biography of J. M. Barrie, which appeared in 1941. He went on to produce seven more novels and some books of reminiscences, but after the early death of his wife in 1949, he published no more and lived quietly in London until his death. He died on 4 August 1971. ANOTHER PART OF THE WOOD Miss Ursula Brett, known to her friends as Noodles, gets sent back to her seaside school by her miserly uncle after apparently encouraging improper advances from the persistent and slimy Mr Fitzgibbon. But her vivacious beauty and kind-heartedness lead her into further trouble and she runs away to join the seafront Pierrot players. Luckily, her brother (with his best friend ‘Snubs’), her aunt Mrs Millet, and her uncle’s neighbours Sylvia Shirley and Mrs Shirley, are all in Newcliff-on-Sea for the bank holiday weekend. Tiverton Square: we first meet it in August, when it is largely deserted of its regular complement of inhabitants, giving us a chance to admire its architecture and history. Through the remainder of a ten month period however it teems with Londoners and we follow the lives of the young and the old, the upstairs and the downstairs of its most conspicuous residents. Not everyone has a happy time of it, but this is real life after all. BIBLIOGRAPHY What next? (1920) Romance to the rescue (1921) Bill the bachelor (1922) According to Gibson (1923) 46 Summer leaves (1934) The wedding (1935) Back again (1936) Jacinth (1937) Summertime (1923) London lovers (1938) The Majestic Mystery (1924) BR Morning, noon and night (1938) Greenery Street (1925) (Republished in 2002 by Persephone Books) The story of J. M. B. [US title: Barrie] (1941) BR The fortunes of Hugo (1926) Upside-down (1943) Life with Topsy (1942) The flower show (1927) Ho! or, How it all strikes me (1944) Tales from Greenery Street (1928) Tales for a godchild (1944) Another part of the wood (1929)BR Our hero (1947) Huddlestone House (1945) How amusing! (1929) We're here! (1947) The young Livingstones (1930) Where am I? or, A stranger here myself (1948) The Square circle (1930) David's day (1932) Ian and Felicity [US title: Peninsula Place] (1932) Having fun (1933) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal Chelbury Abbey (1933) BR By auction (1949) Her ladyship (1949) It makes the world go round (1950) GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ALISTAIR MAIR —Part of Bloomsbury Reader NEW SIGNING “As an observer he is first rate ... His characters too are splendidly defined...'“ The Illustrated London News THE RIPENING TIME The Gorbals tenements are being demolished and gleaming new estates are carving their way through the green fields that surround the city. Tom, raised in a Glasgow tenement, is a sheltered, self-contained lad who drifts through life while his widowed mother worries about his inability to find the right girl. Then Mary from the new Easterton estate takes him in hand. Surrounded by all the sparkling new appliances of hire-purchase matrimony, the recession begins to bite. Long hours, loneliness and cruelty lead Tom to drift off in another direction, down the garden to the safe haven of his greenhouse. A man needs a hobby, and surely gardening never hurt a soul... Born of mixed Highland and Lowland parentage and brought up in Ayrshire, Alistair Mair was a medical student at Glasgow University in the 1940s. After graduation he worked for a year in a Glasgow hospital and spent two years in the R. A. F., mainly as a pathologist in the Tropical Medicine Unit. Two more years in hospitals after demobilization were followed by a long journey to China and Japan as ship’s surgeon. He married a girl from Melbourne and with her he returned to Scotland where he set up in general practice. During the next ten years of unremitting work as a doctor he began to publish his first books, and a son and daughter were born to the Mairs. Late in 1962 he decided to make writing a full time occupation and went with his family to live in an Argyllshire village. DIANA AND THE WISE MAN In this, Alistair Mair’s third novel, he deals with the problem of a young woman doctor and an older man, brought together by tragedy and separated by the almost insoluble difficulties of modern life; social inequality, difference in religion, opposing outlooks on all conventional life. How Diana and her Wise Man coped with their joint and individual problems is the basis of this beautiful and poignant love-story. BIBLIOGRAPHY Rue With A Difference The Douglas Affair Yesterday Was Summer BR Where The East Wind Blows Turning Point The Devil's Minister BR The Man Within The Seventeenth Laird Diana and the Wise Man BR The Ripening Time (available as e-book) RIGHTS SOLD: UK and US: The Wishing Tree E-books (The Ripening Time, adapted by Catherine MacLeod) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 47 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MAGGIE MAKEPEACE—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Sparkling comedy… high-value entertainment” - Sunday Times Maggie Makepeace came to writing late in life, having begun her career as a zoologist. She had a number of jobs in scientific research and Wildlife Trusts, the most rewarding of which was a 3-year contract on a Scottish estuary studying the social behaviour of shelducks. For a brief time in the 70s she was a television presenter for Yorkshire TV and London Weekend, and gradually became more interested in the psychology of human behaviour, especially communication – or the lack of it – and in the way that some people attempt to control the lives of others. BREAKING THE CHAIN When Phoebe marries Duncan Moon, she is unprepared for the stifling effect of his alarming family, and the many ways in which they try to exclude her from their lives. Only when Phoebe reads the hidden diaries of her father-in-law’s ex-mistress, does she learn the truth about the Moons. When in the 80s she moved back to the West Country, she began to write in earnest. Her first novel was published by Random House when she was 50, followed by 3 others. She has written 5 in all. TRAVELLING HOPEFULLY For Imogen Redcliff, to leave a man who suffered from an incurable illness was inconceivable. But she still felt trapped in a marriage that had become predictable and stifling. Her exotic holiday – taken on her own in the Seychelles – turns out to be liberating, but not in the way she had intended. 48 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE WOULD-BEGETTER Hector is in search of a woman. Not because he wants to fall in love but because he wants a son, someone to inherit his adored country estate. But as Hector pursues his ambition, he underrates the force of his charm and, nine months later, finds he has more than one heir to choose from. OUT OF STEP From the moment that Nell sees the picturesque cottage in its idyllic setting by an estuary, she knows she must have it. Things become far more complicated when she meets Rob, the owner and falls in love with him. WATERSHED "Vinny sat on the bank close to the water, caught up once again in the spirit of the place. When she'd been here in late May the yellow flags were blooming at the margins of the ditches. Today, there were little electric blue damselflies zipping about just above the water, like fairies in Lycra. I'm 45, she thought, the age when people begin to ask, "Is this all there is?"" This is a black comedy of failed communication and emotional manipulation, deeply seasoned with compassion and hope. Jonathan arrives in the Somerset Levels and shuts himself away in a lonely cottage to write about his obsession - water. He poses an irresistible challenge for Pamela, a forceful pillar of the community. But why does she find him so resistant to her blandishments - and so rude? Only Pamela's long-suffering companion Vinny has the desire and the sensitivity to get to the bottom of Jonathan's strange behaviour. But she herself is trapped by emotional blackmail. Will Jonathan prove to be her saviour, as much as she is his? Vinny is forced to make a difficult decision, and comes to her own personal watershed. Storms, fire and floods suddenly raise the stakes for everyone. As the waters rise, emotions are also set to burst their bounds. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 49 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ROBERT MARSHALL—Part of Bloomsbury Reader IN THE SEWERS OF LVOV A stirring tale of survival against overwhelming odds, based on oral and written testimony and recounted with novelistic intensity by documentary filmmaker Marshall. Robert Marshall’s career has been divided between writing books and plays, and producing arts and history programming initially for the BBC and more recently live recordings of great theatre productions for cinema release. His writing career began with a series of radio plays, and a Play for Today Before Water Lilies for the BBC in the 1970s. During the 1980s and 90s he scripted and directed over thirty programmes for the BBC, from documentaries to dramas including Summer of the Bomb, Light in the Dark, All the King's Men, Blacklist, Storm from the East and many others. During the same period he published All the King's Men (Collins 1988) which was option by Stanley Kubrick, In the Sewers of Lvov (Collins 1990) which was has recently been made into the feature film In Darkness, Shadow Makers (Penguin 1990) and Storm From the East (BBC 1994) which was top of the Times non-fiction best-selling list for over two months. He continues to write plays and TV scripts - and he is an Executive Producer for The Globe on Screen, at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre. Recording unforgettable characters and startling scenes, Marshall explains how a small group of Jews managed to escape the liquidation of the Lvov ghetto by hiding within the city's elaborate sewer system. Living for over a year amid rats, filth, and the constant pounding of rushing water, the ten survivors --from an initial 21--find an unlikely saviour in a seemingly ordinary Polish sewer worker made extraordinary by his devotion to the dangerous task he embraces as his ``mission.'' Also a worthy counterpart to his varied flock--including a beautiful, pregnant widow, an energetic Hasid, and two young children--is a daring former black-marketeer who actually smuggles himself into the local forced-labour camp in an attempt to rescue the sister of the woman he loves. Relying on straightforward accumulation of day-today detail (crawling through 16-inch pipes to get water; picking off each day's lice; coping with dysentery and spoiled food), heightened by chilling vignettes (the camp commandant having children ``thrown into the air while he took aim and shot at them from the veranda''; mothers wordlessly jumping off roofs after their children are taken away), the narrative renders its nightmare world in brilliantly sensory and emotional terms. Unrelenting and powerful. BIBLIOGRAPHY Storm from the East: From Genghis Khan to Khubilai Khan All the King’s Men Shadow Makers In the Sewers of Lvov BR Rights Sold: In Darkness, the movie adaptation of IN THE SEWERS OF LVOV, directed by Agnieszka Holland, was nominated for an Oscar as best foreign language film. Opened in theatres in March 2012. Polish: Swiat Ksiazki Sp. z.o.o. (In the Sewers of Lvov) Japanese: Shueisha Publishing (In the Sewers of Lvov) 50 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION GRAHAM MASTERTON—Part of Bloomsbury Reader ‘"One of the few true masters of the horror genre." James Herbert RECENT SIGNING WHITE BONES On a farm in Southern Ireland, the dismembered bones of eleven women are found in a common grave, buried eight decades ago. Detective Superintendent Katie Maguire is used to bloodshed, but this ivory litter of human remains is unimaginable butchery. In isolated darkness not far away, an American tourist is at the mercy of a serial killer. His tools are a boning knife, twine, and a doll fashioned from nails and fishhooks. The murder of his victims is second only to the pleasure of their pain. Graham Masterton (born 16 January 1946 in Edinburgh) is a British horror author. Originally editor of Mayfair and the British edition of Penthouse, Graham Masterton's first novel The Manitou was released in 1976. This novel was adapted in 1978 for the film The Manitou. Further works garnered critical acclaim, including a Special Edgar award by the Mystery Writers of America for Charnel House and a Silver Medal by the West Coast Review of Books for Mirror. He is also the only non-French winner of the prestigious Prix Julia Verlanger for his novel Family Portrait, an imaginative reworking of the Oscar Wilde novel The Picture of Dorian Gray. Masterton was also the editor of Scare Care, a horror anthology published for the benefit of abused children in Europe and the USA. As an eighty-year-old mystery unfolds, so does a modern-day ritual that’s marked Katie Maguire as its next victim. For what once happened in this small village is happening again. It’s more than a series of horrifying crimes. It’s tradition. The first of Masterton’s novel to feature Katie Maguire, Ireland’s first female Detective Superintendent, this is a wonderfully commercial read. Here, Masterton has skilfully let the reader into the deepest intimacies of Katie’s life, without losing the excitement of the race to capture the villain. Masterton's novels often contain visceral sex and horror. In addition to his novels Masterton has written a number of sex instruction books, including How To Drive Your Man Wild In Bed and Wild Sex for New Lovers. A number of his novels have also been adapted into films. Masterton currently lives in Surrey, England 51 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION RIGHTS SOLD UK: Head of Zeus (White Bones, Broken Angels) Severn House (The Red Hotel, Garden of Lies, Panic, Community) BROKEN ANGELS The body of an elderly priest is discovered in the Blackwater River north of Cork in southern Ireland. He has been bound with harp wire, castrated and garrotted. Leading the investigation is Detective Superintendent Katie Maguire, the first female detective superintendent in Ireland. At first, Katie suspects that the killer is a man who was abused by priests as a schoolboy, even as the local vicars try to convince Katie that the killer was a retarded church handyman, who subsequently committed suicide. However, as more priests are murdered, notebooks are discovered that reveal a centuries-old ritual being used on young boys. And the victims have returned to seek revenge… Broken Angels is Graham Masterton’s second novel featuring Detective Superintendent Katie Maguire. Over the course of the novel we see Masterton’s talent for combining the personal with the horrifying, as we see Katie struggling to decide if she should quit her job, leave her friends, and go to America with her lover, who has been forced to quit Ireland because of the financial recession. At the very end of the book, she makes up her mind... US: Samhain Publishing (Plague) French: Editions Bragelonne (Blind Panic, Ritual, Walkers, The Pariah, Family Portrait, Apparition, The 5th Witch, Manitou Blood, Descendant, The Revenge Of The Manitou, Burial, Spirit Jump, The Devil In Gray, Night Wars, Night Warriors, Night Plague, Death Dream, Edgewise, The Djinn, Death Trance, Tengu) Le Cherche Midi Editeur (Kingdom Of The Blind) Greek: Jemma Press (Blind Panic, Mirror, Family Portrait), Oxy Publishing (Black Angel, The Pariah, The Sleepless, Flesh & Blood, Death Trance, Manitou Man, Walkers, The Devils Of D-Day, The Devil In Gray, Hymn, A Terrible Beauty) Italian: Gargoyle (Manitou Blood) Polish: Rebis (The Red Hotel, The Red Mask, Night Of The Gargoyles, Ultimate Evil, Panic), Albatros (Manitou Blood, Night Wars, Wendigo, Jessica's Angel, The Door Keepers, Ultimate Evil, Spirit, The Manitou, The Revenge Of The Manitou, Voice Of An Angel, Rich, The Devils Of D-Day, Maiden Voyage, Feelings Of Fear, Witch Hunt, Manitou Armageddon, Fire Spirit, Prey, Death Dream, Ghost Music, A Mile Before Morning, Walkers, Empress, Lords Of The Air, The Ninth Nightmare, Basilisk (Monster Hunters), Holy Terror, Flesh And Blood, The Devil In Gray) Ksiaznica (Lady Of Fortune, Railroad) Replika (House Of Bones, Hurry Monster, The Gray Madonna, Absence Of Beast) German: Festa Verlag (Charnel House, Walkers) 52 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Horror The Djinn The Sphinx Charnel House The Devils of D-Day The Hell Candidate The Heirloom The Wells of Hell Tengu The Pariah Family Portrait (based on Oscar Wilde's novel The Picture of Dorian Gray. Also published as Picture of Evil) Death Trance Mirror Ritual Walkers Salamander Apparition Black Angel (also published as Master of Lies) The Hymn (also published as The Burning) Prey (based on H. P. Lovecraft's short story "The Dreams in the Witch House") The Sleepless Flesh & Blood Spirit The House That Jack Built The Chosen Child House of Bones The Doorkeepers BR Hair Raiser Trauma The Hidden World The Devil In Gray Unspeakable Descendant (only, so far, published volume of a proposed Vampire Hunter series) Edgewise The 5th Witch Death Mask Ghost Music Basilisk (only, so far, published volume of a proposed Basilisk series) Fire Spirit Petrified Manitou series The Manitou Revenge of the Manitou Burial Spirit Jump (short story) Manitou Blood Blind Panic The Burgers of Calais Camelot Changeling Cold Turkey BR Eau Noire Egg Eric the Pie Ever, Ever After Rook series Evidence of Angles Rook Fairy Story Tooth and Claw 5A Bedford Row The Terror Friend in Need BR Snowman The Grey Madonna Swimmer Grease Monkey Darkroom Grief Demon's Door The Heart of Helen Day Ultimate Evil Heart of Stone Garden of Lies Heroine BR The Hungry Moon Historical fiction Hurry Monster Heartbreaker I, The Martian Rich J.R.E. Ponsford Railroad Jack Be Quick BR Solitaire The Jajouka Penis-Beetle Corroboree BR Laird of Dunain Maiden Voyage Lolicia BR Lady of Fortune Making Belinda Headlines Men of Maes Silver Mother of Invention Lords of the Air Neighbours From Hell Empress Out of Her Depth BR Picnic at Lac Du Sang BR Thrillers Pig's Dinner Fireflash 5 (also published as A Road kill BR Mile Before Morning) Rococo Plague The Root of All Evil The Sweetman Curve Rug Famine Saint Joan Ikon Saving Grace BR Condor The Scrawler Sacrifice The Secret Shih-Tan Genius Sex Object Holy Terror The Sixth Man Katie Maguire Son of Beast Innocent Blood Spirit Jump Chaos Theory Spirits of the Age Rules of Duel St. Bronach's Branch Suffer Kate Sissy Sawyer series The Sympathy Society BR Touchy and Feely (based on The Taking of Mr. Bill the Beltway snipers) Underbed The Painted Man (also Voodoo Child published as Death Mask) Will (Cthulhu Mythos pastiche, The Red Hotel features Yog-Sothoth) The Woman in the Wall Short stories Absence of Beas Sex instruction books Anaïs BR Acts of Love A Polite Murder Your Erotic Fantasies The Ballyhooly Boy BR Girls Who Said Yes Beijing Craps How a Woman Longs to be Bridal Suite Loved Night Warriors series Night Warriors Death Dream Night Plague Night Wars The Ninth Nightmare 53 How to be the Perfect Lover Isn't It Time You Did Something Kinky? Sex is Everything How to be a Good Bad Girl Women's Erotic Dreams 1,001 Erotic Dreams Interpreted How to Drive Your Man Wild in Bed How to Drive Your Woman Wild in Bed The High Intensity Sex Plan More Ways to Drive Your Man Wild in Bed Sex Secrets of the Other Woman How to Drive Your Lover Wild in Bed How to Make Love Six Nights a Week Wild in Bed Together Drive Him Wild Single, Wild, Sexy ... and Safe How to Drive Your Man Even Wilder in Bed How to Make His Wildest Dreams Come True Secrets of the Sexually Irresistible Woman The Seven Secrets of Really Great Sex The Secrets of Sexual Play Wild Sex for New Lovers Up All Night GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ANNE MELVILLE—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “There are moments in life when there is nothing like a good juicy saga read and Anne Melville is a most competent and engaging mistress of the craft.” - Oxford Today DEBUTANTE Debutante is the story of the lives and loves of four girls who come out in during the London Season of 1939—the last Season before the outbreak of war. Born in Harrow, Anne Melville was the daughter of the author and lecturer Bernard Newman and the widow of Jeremy Potter, novelist and historian. She was a scholar at St. Hugh’s, where she read modern history. She died in August 1998 after a short illness. For the eighteen-year-old girls who were presented at Court in the spring of 1939, their Season as Debutantes promised four months of dances and parties and all kinds of excitement. For their mothers, the Season represented a campaign to be fought with every weapon at their disposal. But a different struggle was looming as the Season came to an end: a world war. This is a story about debutantes who were brought up to expect a privileged life but found themselves facing danger, bereavement and death. How well would they survive? BIBLIOGRAPHY Lorimer Family The Lorimer Line (1977) BR Lorimer Legacy (1979) BR Lorimers at War (1980) BR Lorimers in Love (1981) BR The Last of the Lorimers (1983) BR Lorimer Loyalties (1984) BR Hardie House of Hardie (1987) Grace Hardie (1988) The Hardie Inheritance (1990) General Fiction Alexa (1979) Blaize (1981) Family Fortunes (1984) Marriage Without Love (1985) Sirocco (1988) Stranger on the Beach (1989) The Dangerfield Diaries (1989) Snapshots (1990) The Tantivy Trust (1992) A Clean Break (1993) The Russian Tiara (1994) Standing Alone (1995) The Longest Silence (1996) Lochlander (1996) Role Place (1996) Just What I Wanted (1997) The Eyes of the World (1998) Debutante (1999) Home Run (1999) THE LORIMER FAMILY SERIES “Anne Melville brings to this saga a lively and informed sense of period—this is not stay-at-home domestic drama—and a nice ability to handle a number of well-drawn characters.” Daily Telegraph This series of six novels charts the lives, loves, adventures and mishaps of the Lorimer family. The saga follows the family to destinations as far ranging as London, Jamaica, Heidelberg and San Francisco, through death and betrayal, war and passion. Gripping to the last, Melville has crafted a dramatic and intimate insight into a the legacy of a rich and powerful family in Victorian England . 54 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION NICHOLAS MOSLEY—Part of Bloomsbury Reader BIBLIOGRAPHY Nicholas Mosley (born 25 June 1923) is a British novelist. Born in London, Mosley was educated at Eton and Balliol College, Oxford and served in Italy during the Second World War, winning the Military Cross for bravery. On the death of his father on 3 December 1980, he succeeded to the Baronetcy. In 1999 he lost his seat in the House of Lords due to the House of Lords Act 1999. His father, Sir Oswald Mosley, founded the British Union of Fascists in 1932 and was a supporter of Benito Mussolini. Sir Oswald was arrested in 1940 for his antiwar campaigning, and spent the majority of World War II in prison. As an adult, Nicholas was a harsh critic of his father in Beyond the Pale: Sir Oswald Mosley and Family 1933–1980 (1983), calling into question his father's motives and understanding of politics. Nicholas Mosley has been married twice and is the father of five children. He lives in London. HOPEFUL MONSTERS A sweeping, comprehensive epic, Hopeful Monsters tells the story of the love affair between Max, an English student of physics and biology, and Eleanor, a German Jewess and political radical. Together and apart, Max and Eleanor participate in the great political and intellectual movements which shape the twentieth century, taking them from Cambridge and Berlin to the Spanish Civil War, Russia, the Sahara, and finally to Los Alamos to witness the first nuclear test. Novels Spaces of the Dark (1951) The Rainbearers (1955) Corruption (1957) Meeting Place (1962) Accident (1965) (filmed in 1967 by Joseph Losey, with a screenplay by Harold Pinter) Assassins Impossible Object (1968) (filmed in 1973 by John Frankenheimer as Story of a Love Story) Natalie Natalia (1971) Catastrophe Practice (1979) (Part One of the Catastrophe Practice Series) BR Imago Bird (1980) (Part Two of the Catastrophe Practice Series) BR Serpent (1981) (Part Three of the Catastrophe Practice Series) Judith (1986) (Part Four of the Catastrophe Practice Series) BR Hopeful Monsters (1990) (Part Five of the Catastrophe Practice Series) – which won the Whitbread Book of the Year Award. BR Children of Darkness and Light (1995) The Hesperides Tree (2001) Inventing God (2003) Look at the Dark (2005) God's Hazard (2009) Non-fiction African Switchback (1958) The Life of Raymond Raynes (1961) The Assassination of Trotsky (1972) (filmed in 1972 by Joseph Losey as The Assassination of Trotsky) Julian Grenfell, his life and the times of his death, 1888– 1915 (1976) Beyond the Pale: Sir Oswald Mosley and Family 19331980 (1983) Experiece and Religion (2006) The Uses Of Slime Mould – Essays of four Decades (2004) Autobiography Efforts at Truth (1994) BR Time at War (2006) BR Paradoxes of Peace (2009) RIGHTS SOLD Hopeful Monsters received Britain's prestigious Whitbread Award in 1990. Praising Mosley's ability to distil complex modes of thought, the New York Times called Hopeful Monsters a "virtual encyclopaedia of twentieth century thought, in fictional form". UK: Eland Publishing Ltd (Hopeful Monsters), Random House (Look At The Dark) Orion Publishing Group (Time At War) US: Dalkey Archive Press (20 titles) 55 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MERVYN PEAKE - CENTENARY YEAR IN 2011 “Peake’s books are actual additions to life; they give, like certain rare dreams, sensations we have never had before, and enlarge our conception of the range of the possible experience.” – C.S. Lewis Born of British parents in China in 1911, Mervyn Peake was an acclaimed writer, artist, poet and illustrator. He is best known for his Gormenghast books (three works conceived as part of a cycle, the completion of which was halted by his death). Amazingly, a fourth book in the series called Titus Awakes, written by Peake’s widow, Maeve Gilmore from detailed notes left by the author, was recently discovered by Peake’s granddaughter in the attic of their family home. 2011 makes the centenary of Mervyn Peake’s birth. PFD will be celebrating the occasion with new editions of his work (with specially commissioned introductions and never before published illustrations), exhibitions and films. THE GORMENGHAST SERIES Titus Groan, Gormenghast, Titus Alone ‘One of the most important works of the imagination to come out of [this] age’ –Anthony Burgess, Spectator Enter the world of Gormenghast…the vast crumbling castle to which the seventy-seventh Earl, Titus Groan, is Lord and heir. A gothic labyrinth of roofs and turrets, cloisters and corridors, stairwells and dungeons, it is also the cobwebbed kingdom of Byzantine government and age old ritual. But the world of Gormenghast is changing; a world primed to implode beneath the weight of centuries of intrigue, treachery, manipulation and murder. His daughter, Clare, has written Under a Canvas Sky, an autobiographical account of her parents’ romance and her own memories of her happy bohemian childhood, which was published by Constable and Robinson in 2011. MR PYE ‘The novel gives a clear sense of Sark as somewhere both remarkable and beautiful.’ – A.L. Kennedy, The Guardian Equipped with love, Mr Pye lands on the island of Sark; his mission is to convert the inhabitants into a crusading force for the undiluted goodness that he feels within. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal Packed with wonderful characters and cameos, Mr Pye is a tour de force, a battle between good and evil which turns into a hilarious romp through the prejudices of a close-knit society. 56 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION TITUS AWAKES With Maeve Gilmore Gormenghast was never intended to be a trilogy. Mervyn Peake envisaged several books, charting the life of Titus Groan from birth to death. Sadly, his death in 1968 left the third book, Titus Alone, incomplete and Titus died with him. To coincide with the centenary of the birth of the Mervyn Peake in 2011, PFD are able to present the previously undiscovered Titus Awakes, the fourth book in the series; written by Peake’s widow, Maeve Gilmore from notes left by the author, recently discovered by in the attic of the Peake family home. Titus Groan half-wakes from a dream. His partawakening brings with it the realisation that it is time for him to discover his rightful place in the world. In a dream-like state, Titus’ wanderings lead him through the world of Gormenghast to scenes from Mervyn Peake’s own life – from Chelsea studios to the hospital where Mervyn spent time during his long illness. As Titus finally awakes and discovers that he must journey to the island of Sark, the place he has been happiest, he is welcomed at the harbour by a strangely familiar figure- Mervyn Peake himself. BOY IN DARKNESS And other stories ‘A master of the macabre and a traveller through the deeper and darker chasms of the imagination’ – The Times Boy in Darkness concerns a boy (clearly Titus Groan), who, yearning for freedom, encounters the nightmare world outside the keep. Overwhelmed by the pomp and gruelling ritual of life in Gormenghast, the boy braves an escape from his hereditary goal. Beyond the castle walls, he wanders into a sinister and soulless land, when he is captured by Goat and Hyena, the grotesque henchmen of an evil master intent on claiming the young boy’s soul. A disturbingly atmospheric tale, told with the force and simplicity of allegory, Boy in Darkness distils the strange logic of the Gormenghast trilogy into a story of pith and mystery, which bears comparison with Kafka and Poe. RIGHTS SOLD BIBLIOGRAPHY The White Chief of the Unzimbooboo Kaffirs (1921) Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor (1939) Shapes and Sounds (1941) Rhymes without Reason (1944) Titus Groan (1946) The Craft of the Lead Pencil (1946) Letters from a Lost Uncle (from Polar Regions) (1948) Drawings by Mervyn Peake (1949) Gormenghast (1950) The Glassblowers (1950) Mr Pye (1953) Figures of Speech (1954) Titus Alone (1959) The Rhyme of the Flying Bomb (1962) Poems and Drawings (1965) A Reverie of Bone and other Poems (1967) Selected Poems (1972) A Book of Nonsense (1972) The Drawings of Mervyn Peake (1974) Mervyn Peake: Writings and Drawings (1974) Twelve Poems (1975) Boy in Darkness (1976) Peake’s Progress (1978) Ten Poems (1993) Eleven Poems (1995) The Cave (1996) Boy in Darkness and other stories (2007) Collected Poems (2008) UK: Vintage (Illustrated Gormenghast Trilogy; Gormenghast Trilogy; Titus Awakes; Mr Pye); Constable & Robinson (Under a Canvas Sky); Queen Anne Press (Mervyn Peake Centenary Edition); Carcanet Press (Complete Nonsense); Peter Owen (Selected Nonsense Poetry); British Library Publishing (Peake’s Progress); Methuen (The Hunting of the Snark; Letters from a Lost Uncle); US: Overlook (Gormenghast Trilogy; Illustrated Gormenghast Trilogy, Titus Awakes; Peake’s Progress) Chinese: Shanghai Translation (Gormenghast Trilogy, Titus Awakes) Danish: Ries Forlag (Gormenghast Trilogy) French: Phebus (Gormenghast Trilogy); Calmann Levy (Illustrations for Alice in Wonderland/Through the Looking Glass); Gallimard (Mr Pye; Boy in Darkness); Italian: Adelphi (The Gormenghast Trilogy) German: Klett Cotta (Gormenghast Trilogy; Titus Awakes) Hungarian: Pesci Direkt (Gormenghast Trilogy) Japanese: Tokyo Sogensha (Gormenghast Trilogy; Titus Awakes) Netherlands: De Boekerij: (Gormenghast Trilogy; Titus Awakes) Polish: Wydawnictwo Literacki (Gormenghast Trilogy; Titus Awakes) Portuguese: Saida Emergencia (Gormenghast Trilogy) Russian: Exmo (Illustrations from Alice in Wonderland/Through the Looking Glass) Spanish: Planeta (Gormenghast Trilogy) Turkish: Ithaki (Gormenghast Trilogy; Titus Awakes) 57 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION RAYMOND POSTGATE NEW SIGNING VERDICT OF TWELVE Published in 1940 about a trial by jury seen through the eyes of each of the twelve jurors as they listen to the evidence and try to reach a unanimous verdict of either “Guilty” or “Not guilty”. Verdict of Twelve is set in England in the late 1930s (Hitler, Nazism and in particular antiSemitism are referred to several times). Up to the final pages of the novel, till after the trial is over, the reader does not know if the defendant — a middle-aged woman charged with murder — is innocent or not. Raymond Postgate was born in Cambridge. A founding member of the British Communist Party in 1920, Postgate joined the staff of The Communist and soon became its editor. As such, he was one of Britain's first left-wing former-communists. In the late 1920s and early 1930s he published his first novel, No Epitaph (1932), and worked as an editor for the Encyclopædia Britannica. In 1932 he visited the Soviet Union with a Fabian delegation and contributed to the collection Twelve Studies in Soviet Russia. Later in the 1930s he co-authored with G. D. H. Cole The Common People, a social history of Britain from the mid-18th century. SOMEBODY AT THE DOOR Postgate wrote several mystery novels that drew on his socialist beliefs to set crime, detection and punishment in a broader social and economic context. His most famous novel is Verdict of Twelve (1940), his other novels include Somebody at the Door (1943) and The Ledger Is Kept (1953). After the death of H. G. Wells, Postgate edited some revisions of the twovolume Outline of History that Wells had first published in 1920. The author of a near, contemporary classic, Verdict Of Twelve, with another originally presented study in crime as the murder of an English suburbanite, a prominent townsman, calls up the past histories of fellow travellers in a train compartment. A chemist victimized by blackmail, a cobbler ruined by an air raid, a refugee who had known much previous drama, and a young editor— lover of the dead man's wife, implicated in a strange case. Somebody at the Door is compounded of the stories of the people involved in the murder. He died on 29 March 1971. RIGHTS SOLD: US: Academy Chicago Publisher (Verdict of Twelve) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 58 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION EVELYN PRENTIS A NURSE IN TIME & A NURSE IN ACTION & A NURSE AND MOTHER SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLERS “Perceptive, warm and very funny” - Sunday Telegraph A NURSE AND A MOTHER 'Matron smiled. It was the smile that one woman gives to another and not the chilly facial movement from Matrons of old. "Do you think you would be able to work 9 to 3.30?" For a moment I couldn't think at all. There seemed something not quite right in being paid for so little labour.' Evelyn Prentis died in 2001 at the age of 85. Her daughters Judith Campbell and Barbara Mumford say: ‘We have always felt that these books are special, as indeed was our mother. She was a larger than life character with a disarming and extreme sense of humour. We are delighted that our mother’s books are being republished. We miss her greatly and are thrilled that her legacy lives on for another generation.’ At the end of the Second World War, as husbands came back to Civvy Street their wives had the luxury of staying at home with the children. For a short while at least. Soon Evelyn realised she had to find part-time work to make ends meet, and to her astonishment she was offered part-time hours at her old hospital.The day-to-day job hadn't changed much, but she was now a nurse and mother. Whooping cough and measles could still kill a small child, and the early '50s polio epidemic left the whole country in shock.But the nurses worked hard, moaned incessantly about their aching feet and yet found things to laugh at, just as they did from the start of their training. If old soldiers never die, then neither do nurses. . A Nurse in Time is the first of five books by Evelyn Prentis about her life as a nurse in the midtwentieth century. The remarkable series was first published in the 1970s. It has been uncovered from the archives and has been republished in March 2011 for a new generation of readers to enjoy, and was a Sunday Times Bestseller in it’s first month. A Nurse in Action, where we see Evelyn as a newlyqualified nurse during the Second World War, followed on from the success of A Nurse in Time, reaching no. 12 in the Sunday Times Bestseller list in its first week. Three further books will follow (A Nurse in Parts, A Nurse Nearby and A Turn for the Nurse). BIBLIOGRAPHY RIGHTS SOLD A Nurse in Time (1977) A Nurse in Action (1980) A Nurse in Parts (1980) A Nurse Nearby (1982) A Turn for the Nurse (1982) UK: Ebury Press (A Nurse in Time, A Nurse in Action, A Nurse in Parts, A Nurse Nearby, A Turn for the Nurse) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 59 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION V.S. PRITCHETT—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Reading him, laughter and pathos dovetail in a manner that captures the tang of reality. This sense of the real is augmented, paradoxically, by a readiness to embrace the unusual, and even the surreal… some of the best English language short stories of the last hundred years.” – The Guardian MR BELUNCLE Victor Sawdon Pritchett was born over a toyshop in 1900 and, much to his everlasting distaste, was named after Queen Victoria. A writer and critic, his is widely reputed to be one of the best short story writers of all time, with the rare ability to capture the extraordinary strangeness of everyday life. He in died in 1997. One of V.S. Pritchett’s most enduring characters, Mr Beluncle is narcissistic, sanctimonious and selfindulgent, yet despite these flaws, he is undeniably compelling. Readers who follow this quirky furniture salesman on his seemingly ordinary escapades – shopping for ridiculously expensive houses, attending services at his peculiar church, presiding over a tumultuous family meal – are in for a delightful and disquieting ride. Poignant, hilarious and utterly forgettable, Mr Beluncle is an ideal introduction to one the English language’s most gifted authors. A CARELESS WIDOW AND OTHER STORIES A collection of six deceptively simple stories. In ‘A Trip to the Seaside’, a widower makes a futile journey to court his former secretary, only to be confronted with portions of their past he has selectively set aside. And in ‘A Careless Widow’, a solitary hairdresser takes a holiday to escape the dreary routine of his professional life. 60 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Clare Drummer (1929) The Spanish Virgin and Other Stories (1930) Shirley Sanz (1932) Nothing Like Leather (1935) Dead Man Leading (1937) BR This England (1938, editor) You Make Your Own Life (1938) In My Good Books (1942) BR It May Never Happen (1945) Build the Ships (1946) The Living Novel (1946) BR Why Do I Write? (1948) Mr Beluncle (1951) Books in General (1953) The Spanish Temper (1954) BR Collected Stories (1956) The Sailor, The Sense of Humour and Other Stories (1956) When My Girl Comes Home (1961) London Perceived (1962) BR The Key to My Heart (1963) BR Foreign Faces (1964) BR New York Proclaimed (1964) The Working Novelist (1965) The Saint and Other Stories (1966) Dublin (1967) BR A Cab at the Door (1968) Blind Love (1969) George Meredith and English Comedy (1970) BR Midnight Oil (1971) Balzac (1973) The Camberwell Beauty (1974) BR The Gentle Barbarian: the Life and Work of Turgenev (1977) BR Selected Stories (1978) On the Edge of the Cliff (1979) Myth Makers (1979) The Tale Bearers (1980) The Oxford Book of Short Stories (editor, 1981) The Turn of the Years (with R. Stone, 1982) Collected Stories (1982) More Collected Stories (1983) The Other Side of a Frontier (1980) BR A Man of Letters (1985) BR Chekhov (1988) BR A Careless Widow and Other Stories (1989) BR Complete Short Stories (1990) At Home and Abroad (1990) BR Lasting Impressions (1990) BR Complete Collected Essays (1990) The Pritchett Century (1997) The Essential Pritchett (2004) AT HOME AND ABROAD Fourteen essays on locales from the Thames to the Amazon, demonstrating that Pritchett is a master of the travel piece as well as the literary critique. He is at much at home abroad as he is comfortable in England, and complacent and dull in neither place. RIGHTS SOLD Chinese: Shanghai 99 (Selected Stories) Italian: Adelphi (Blind Love & Other Stories, The Lady from Guatemala, A Trip to the Seaside) Japanese: Kobunsha (a review from The Tale Bearers) Spanish: Fondo de Cultura Economica, Mexico (Selected Essays), La Bestia Equilatera (Blind Love and Other Stories), Random House Mondadori (Selected Essays) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 61 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BERNICE RUBENS - BOOKER PRIZE WINNER—Part of Bloomsbury Reader 'Rubens is compassionately eloquent. She… gleefully extracts comedy from the most unlikely sources' - The Daily Telegraph MADAME SOUSATZKA This is a well-written novel that deals with the relationship between a devoted piano teacher, the Madame Sousatzka of the title, and an aspiring young pianist. The action takes place largely in the dilapidated London home of Sousatzka where three other colourful characters also live. One is a 'countess' in retirement who spends most of her time sitting and looking at the world, the second is a gay osteopath whose theories aim to benefit mankind, and the third, Jenny, is a woman-of-the-evening, albeit one of especial beauty and delicacy. Sousatzka herself came to Britain as a refugee from Russia. She has developed her own system for teaching the piano, but even she has doubts about its efficacy. Bernice Rubens was born in Cardiff, Wales in July 1928. She began writing at the age of 35, when her children started nursery school. Her second novel, Madame Sousatzka (1962), was filmed by John Schlesinger, with Shirley MacLaine in the leading role, in 1988. Her fourth novel, The Elected Member, won the 1970 Booker prize. She was shortlisted for the same prize again in 1978 for A Five Year Sentence. Her last novel, The Sergeants’ Tale, was published in 2003. She was an honorary vice-president of International PEN and served as a Booker judge in 1986. Bernice Rubens died in 2004 aged 76. THE WAITING GAME At ‘The Hollyhocks’ old people’s home, the inhabitants are ‘waiting for the scythe’. But while they are waiting…Lady Celia is running a blackmailing business on the side, Mr Cross keeps a tally of fellow residents’ deaths on the back of his wardrobe, and then there is the rabid old Scots nationalist, and Mrs Green, a woman with a mysterious past. Hardly surprising in this environment that Mrs Bellamy decides she can’t take any more and slits her throat. When Matron hushes it up because it would be bad for business, Lady Celia sees an opportunity to expand her blackmailing operation. Meanwhile two new incomers disturb the life of the home further; Mrs Feinberg, a sprightly Jewish woman of whom the other residents are immediately suspicious, and the elegant Mr Rufus. Hidden pasts, unusual sexual preferences and wickedly dark humour are mixed to delicious effect in Bernice Rubens’ wonderful novel. 62 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE ELECTED MEMBER NINE LIVES The killer's modus operandi is the same in each instance: strangulation, always with a guitar string, pulled tight from behind until life is taken. And though the murders are taking place up and down country, there is one other similarity that Inspector Wilkins can't help noticing. Each and every victim is a psychotherapist… Donald Dorricks is on a mission. Nine psychotherapists to go and his crusade is complete. Yet even after giving himself up and confessing to the killings, he still protests his innocence. And just as Inspector Wilkins struggles to catch the killer, Dorricks' wife Verine attempts to understand the reasoning behind the murders... BIBLIOGRAPHY Set on Edge (1960) Madame Sousatzka (1962) BR Mate in Three (1966) The Elected Member (1969) Sunday Best (1971) BR Go Tell the Lemming (1973) I Sent a Letter To My Love (1975) The Ponsonby Post (1977) A Five-Year Sentence (1978) Spring Sonata (1979) Birds of Passage (1981) Brothers (1983) Mr Wakefield's Crusade (1985) Our Father (1987) Kingdom Come (1990) A Solitary Grief (1991) Mother Russia (1992) Autobiopsy (1993) Hijack (1993) Yesterday in the Back Lane (1995) The Waiting Game (1997) I, Dreyfus (1999) Milwaukee (2001) Nine Lives (2002) The Sergeants' Tale (2003) When I Grow Up (2005) This Booker Prize winning novel about a close-knit but dysfunctional Jewish family is set in the East End of London in the 1960s. Norman Zweck, the golden son of a rabbi and his late wife, whose promising career as a barrister has been derailed by drug use and mental illness brought on by his mother's incessant demands and his personal failings, is slowly becoming unhinged — again. He spends his days in his parents' old bedroom, locked away from his father and younger sister, popping amphetamine pills in a futile attempt to keep his demons at bay. His father and younger unmarried sister Bella, who deeply love Norman but fear his ever more worrisome outbursts, work together to place him in a mental institution, in a last ditch effort to get him back to his old self. As he recuperates in the institution, the three members of the family, and Norman's estranged sister Esther, reflect on how they reached this critical point. Past actions, indiscretions, and tragic decisions haunt each of them, but none more than Norman. The Zuckers attempt to reconcile their differences once and for all, as Norman descends further into madness and as his father's health begins to fail. RIGHTS SOLD Bulgarian: Arka (I Sent a Letter to my Love) UK: Little, Brown (When I Grow Up, The Sergeants' Tale, The Waiting Game, Brothers, The Elected Member), Library of Wales (I Sent a Letter to My Love), Random House (A Solitary Grief) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 63 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION JOHN B. SANFORD—Part of Bloomsbury Reader NEW SIGNING “Perhaps the most outstanding neglected novelist."-The Cambridge Companion to Jewish American Literature BIBLIOGRAPHY John Sanford or John B. Sanford, born Julian Lawrence Shapiro (May 31, 1904 - March 5, 2003), was an American screenwriter and author who wrote 24 books. The Cambridge Companion to Jewish American Literature describes him as, "Perhaps the most outstanding neglected novelist.” A one-time member of the Communist Party, after he and his wife Marguerite Roberts refused to testify to the House Un-American Activities Committee, they were blacklisted and unable to work in Hollywood for nearly a decade. Sanford wrote half of his books after he was 80. He published a 5-volume autobiography, for which he received a PEN/Faulkner Award and the Los Angeles Times Lifetime Achievement Award. He left three unpublished novels and was writing up until a month before his death at 98. (1980) The Color of the Air (1985) The Water Wheel, (1933) A Very Good Land to Fall The Old Man’s Place (1935) With (1987) Seventy Times Seven (1939) Scenes from the life of an BR American Jew (1985-1991) The People from Heaven The winters of that country. (1943) Tales of the man made seaA Man without Shoes sons (1984) (1951) The waters of darkness, The Land That Touches (1986) Mine (1953) BR A walk in the fire (1989) Every Island Fled Away Maggie: A Love Story (1993) (1964) BR The $300 Man (1967) The view from Mt. Morris. A More Goodly Country: A A Harlem Boyhood (1994) Personal History of America We have a little sister. (1975) Marguerite, the Midwest Adirondack Stories, (1976) years (1995) Intruders in Paradise, A book of American women (1997) (1996) Adirondack Stories, (1976) Tambour (2002) View From This Wilderness: A Palace of Silver. A memoir American Literature as of Maggie Roberts (2003) History, (1977) To Feed Their Hopes. A Book of American Women, THE PEOPLE FROM HEAVEN The People From Heaven (1943) is considered Sanford's masterpiece. The novel tells of a smalltown shop owner who rapes a young AfricanAmerican woman, beats to death a Native American, and tries to get rid of the only Jew in the town. In turn, the shop owner is finally killed by the black woman. At the time, the poet Carl Sandburg lauded the book, and poet William Carlos Williams said it's "the most important book of fiction published here in the last 20 years." RIGHTS SOLD: US: University of Illinois Press (The People From Heaven) "A sacred book, majestic in its rebukes of those who violate the breath and origin of humanity while professing faith and going through the motions of holiness." - Carl Sandburg Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 64 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION JEAN SAUNDERS—Part of Bloomsbury Reader RECENT SIGNING THE BANNISTER GIRLS Jean Saunders (born 8 February 1932 in London, died 3 August 2011) was a British writer of romance novels since 1974. She wrote under her married and maiden name, and also under the pseudonyms of Rowena Summers, Sally Blake, and Rachel Moore. Jean also wrote an erotic novel as Jodi Nicol and also published writing books. Alexandra Best PI Thicker Than Water (2000) Illusions (2000) Deadly Suspicions (2003) Single novels The Fugitives (1974) Only Yesterday (1975) Nightmare (1977) Roses All the Way (1978) The Kissing Time (1982) Love's Sweet Music (1983) Taste the Wine (1983) The Language of Love (1983) Partners in Love (1984) Scarlet Rebel (1984) Golden Destiny (1986) Lady of the Manor (1988) All in the April Morning (1990) The Bannister Girls (1990) BR Secret Touch (1992) To Love and Honour (1992) With This Ring (1993) BR How to Write Realistic Dialogue (1994) The Whispering Dark (1995) Wives, Friends and Lovers (1996) A Gambling Man (1997) Journey's End (1997) A Different Kind of Love (1998) BR Rainbow's End (2000) But the Great War, with all its horrors and degradation, brings with it opportunities for the girls—the stolen lives of a whole generation of young men slowly erodes the man-made barriers to equality and fulfilment. For Ellen, tempestuous and headstrong, the way is paved for her to join the Suffragette movement; for young Angel, yet to discover her true self, the war creates challenges that harden her character, and nurtures a love that unleashes a dangerous passion; and for Louise, the eldest, bright but sensible, the terrible conflict brings a tragedy that threatens to tear her life apart—until the prospect of a new romance promises a heart-warming regeneration of her soul… BIBLIOGRAPHY As JEAN SAUNDERS The bright dawn of the twentieth century finds itself shadowed by the strictures of the Victorian Age. Women, whatever their status in society, are still women and are expected to conform to their welldefined role in life as mother and wife. For the Bannister girls, daughters of a wealthy and respected family, this is not enough. Non fiction The Craft of Writing Romance (1986) Writing Step By Step (1988) How to Create Fictional Characters (1992) How to Research Your Novel (1993) How to Plot Your Novel (2000) As JEAN INNES Single novels Ashton's Folly (1975) Sands of Lamanna (1975) Golden God (1975) Whispering Dark (1976) White Blooms of Yarrow (1976) The Wishing Stone (1976) Boskelly's Bride (1976) Dark Stranger (1979) Silver Lady (1981) Scent of Jamine (1982) Legacy of Love (1982) Seeker of Dreams (1983) Cobden's Cottage (1985) Enchanted Island (1987) Buccaneer's Bride (1989) Dream Lover (1991) Golden Captive (1991) Secret Touch (1992) Tropical Fire (1992) Love's Fortune (1995) Beloved (1997) Jewel (1998) As ROWENA SUMMERS Cornish Clay Saga A Safe Haven (1996) Killigrew Clay (1987) Clay Country (1987) Family Ties (1988) Family Shadows (1995) Primmy's Daughter (1998) White Rivers (1999) September Morning (1999) A Brighter Tomorrow (2000) Caldwell Saga Taking Heart (2000) Daisy's War (2001) The Caldwell Girls (2002) Dreams of Peace (2002) Elkins Saga Shelter from the Storm (2005) Monday's Child (2005) Chase Saga Long Shadows (2007) Distant Horizons (2008) O'Neil Saga Chasing Rainbows (2009) Pot of Gold (2009) Single novels Blackmaddie (1980) The Savage Moon (1982) The Sweet Red Earth (1983) Willow Harvest (1984) Highland Heritage (1991) 65 Velvet Dawn (1991) BR Angel of the Evening (1992) Ellie's Island (1993) Hidden Currents (1994) BR Bargain Bride (1994) A Woman of Property (1994) This Girl (2005) Blackthorn Cottage (2006) As SALLY BLAKE Single novels The Devil's Kiss (1981) Moonlight Mirage (1982) Outback Woman (1989) Lady of Spain (1990) Far Distant Shores (1991) Royal Summer (1992) House of Secrets (1994) Marrying for Love (1997) A Gentleman's Masquerade (1999) As JODI NICOL Single novels Silken Chains (2003) As RACHEL MOORE Cornish Clay Saga The Soldier's Wife (2004) The Farmer's Wife (2005) A Cornish Maid (2006) Single novels Prodigal Daughter (2007) Days to Remember (2008) Summer of Love (2010) GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MARGERY SHARP “Margery Sharp is an adept describer of situations; whether comic or merely piquant, embarrassing or exciting. Her dialogue is brilliant, uncannily true. Her taste is excellent: she is an excellent story teller” – Tatler CLUNY BROWN Margery Sharp was born in 1905, and died in 1991. She is best known for her books for children, but she also wrote for adults. She was a prolific writer in her long career: twenty-six novels for adults, fourteen stories for children, four plays, two mysteries, as well as numerous short stories. The story follows the escapades of a plumber's niece, Cluny Brown, who is twenty years old in England in 1938. Cluny has high spirits and a constant desire for expansion of experience that leads the more staid members of her community to question whether she knows her place. As a consequence of one final London based excursion of discovery outside the bounds of what Cluny's mentors consider proper, she is sent off into good service with a charming country residence know as Friars Carmel to be a Tall Parlour Maid. The coincidental simultaneous arrivals of the young son and heir of the house, a mysterious Polish professor, and a beautiful socialite add complexity to this adventurous tale of a young woman following her dreams and finding her personal freedom in the tumultuous early 20th century. BIBLIOGRAPHY Fiction Rhododendron Pie (1930) Fanfare for Tin Trumpets (1932) The Nymph and The Nobleman (1932) The Flowering Thorn (1934) Sophy Cassmajor (1934) Four Gardens (1935) The Nutmeg Tree (1937) Harlequin House (1939) The Stone of Chastity (1940) Three Companion Pieces (1941) Cluny Brown (1944) Britannia Mews (1946) The Foolish Gentlewoman (1948) Lise Lillywhite (1951) The Gipsy in the Parlour (1954) Something Light (1960) The Sun in Scorpio (1965) In Pious Memory (1967) Rosa (1970) The Innocents (1972) The Lost Chapel Picnic and Other Stories(1973) The Faithful Servants (1975) Summer Visits (1977) The Eye of Love (1957) Martha in Paris (1962) Martha, Eric and George (1964) Children’s Fiction Melisande (1960) Lost at the Fair (1965) The Magical Cockatoo (1974) The Children Next Door (1974) The Rescuers Series The Rescuers (1959) Miss Bianca (1962) The Turret (1963) Miss Bianca in the Salt Mines (1966) Miss Bianca in the Orient (1970) Miss Bianca in the Antarctic (1971) Miss Bianca and the Bridesmaid (1972) RIGHTS SOLD BRITANNIA MEWS Set in Victorian London, Britannia Mews follows the story of Adelaide O’Hara as she falls in love with Henry Lambert, an artist. As O’Hara’s family decide to move to the country, Adelaide announces that she and Lambert will marry, and live in his digs in the unsavoury part of town that is Britannia Mews. Cut off from her family, O’Hara assumes that they will live in happiness, but as Lambert drinks more and more, they marriage disintegrates, and during one argument, Adelaide pushes Henry, who falls down the stairs to his death. A neighbour begins to blackmail Adelaide, having seen the accident, refusing to let Adelaide leave the mews, despite plans to return to her family. About two years later, Adelaide meets a man, Gilbert Lauderdale, who looks exactly like her late husband. The pair soon begin co-habiting, and while Gilbert exhibits signs of a drinking problem much like Henry’s, Gilbert soon discovers Henry’s beautiful puppets, decides to sort out his drinking, and becomes an expert puppeteer. As a result of his new found fame, the two live happily ever after. Italian: Astoria (Cluny Brown, Britannia Mews) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 66 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION EDITH SITWELL—Part of Bloomsbury Reader ‘Sitwell's poetry has come in and out of fashion, but in the early 21st century it seems peculiarly relevant’ – The Times EDITH SITWELL: COLLECTED POEMS Edith Sitwell (1887-1964) was born into an aristocratic family and, along with her brothers, Osbert and Sacheverell, had a significant impact on the artistic life of the 20s. She encountered the work of the French symbolists, Rimbaud in particular, early in her writing life and became a champion of the modernist movement, editing six editions of the controversial magazine Wheels. She remained a crusading force against philistinism and conservatism throughout her life and her legacy lies as much in her unstinting support of other artists as it does in her own poetry. This is the classic poetry of Edith Sitwell, bringing together poems from almost all of her major editions of poetry, including ‘Street Songs’, ‘Green Song’, ‘The Song of the Cold’ and ‘The Canticle of the Rose’. This edition of Sitwell's ‘Collected Poems’ is a testimony to the breadth and insight of her poetic output and includes her own Preface which is highly acclaimed as an analysis of the development of her mind and sensibilities, an explanation of her use of rhythms and intricate verbal patterns, and hence of her poetry itself. TAKEN CARE OF, EDITH SITWELL’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY ‘Eccentricity is not, as dull people would have us believe, a form of madness. It is often a kind of innocent pride, and the man of genius and the aristocrat are frequently regarded as eccentrics because genius and aristocrat are entirely unafraid of and uninfluenced by the opinions and vagaries of the crowd.’ In her memoir, Edith Sitwell muses on her fascinating life. 67 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY Poetry Clowns' Houses (1918) Rustic Elegies (1927) Gold Coast Customs (1929) Aspects of Poetry (1934) Street Songs (1942) The Song of the Cold (1948) Façade, and Other Poems 1920-1935 (1950) Gardeners and Astronomers (1953) Collected Poems (1957) The Outcasts (1962) BR A Book of Flower BR THE ENGLISH ECCENTRICS Eccentricity exists particularly in the English, says Dame Edith, because of 'that peculiar and satisfactory knowledge of infallibility that is the hallmark and the birthright of the British nation.' Hermits, sportsmen, quacks, mariners, the indefatigable British travellers, men of learning, men of living - here is a glorious gallery of the extremes of human nature portrayed with wit, sympathy, knowledge and love. The reader meets The amphibious Lord Rokeby, whose beard reached his knees and who seldom left his bath; Mad Jack Mytton, the hunting squire who jumped a five bar gate in his chaise and set fire to his nightshirt to frighten away the hiccups; Curricle Coats, the Gifted Amateur, whose suit was sewn with diamonds and whose every performance ended in uproar; Irascible Captain Thicknesses, who left his right hand, to be cut off after his death, to his son Lord Audley; Saintly Squire Waterton, the nineteenth century Gerald Durrell, who rode a crocodile bareback and many, many others. Other titles Alexander Pope (1930) The English Eccentrics (1933) Victoria of England (1936) BR I Live under a Black Sun (1937) Fanfare for Elizabeth (1946) BR The Queens and the Hive (1962) BR (biography of Elizabeth I) Taken Care Of (1964) autobiography A Notebook on William Shakespeare BR RIGHTS SOLD UK: Duckworth (Collected Poems), Prion Books (English Women), Peter Owen (I Live Under a Black Sun), Pallas Athene Arts (English Eccentrics) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 68 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ANTHONY STORR ‘beautifully written, humane, intelligent and thoughtful’ - Times Literary Supplement SOLITUDE Anthony Storr (18 May 1920 – 17 March 2001) was an English psychiatrist and author. Born in London, he was a child who was to endure the typical trauma of early 20th century boarding schools. He was educated at Winchester College, Christ's College (University of Cambridge), and Westminster Hospital. He qualified as a doctor in 1944, and subsequently specialized in psychiatry. Storr was known for his psychoanalytical portraits of historical figures. In 1974, Storr moved from private practice to a teaching appointment at the Warneford Hospital in Oxford, until his retirement in 1984. He was associated with Wadham College and was a Fellow at Green College, Oxford. Storr grew up to be kind and insightful, yet, as one of his obituarists observed, he was "no stranger to suffering" and was himself allegedly prone to the frequent bouts of depression his mother had endured. He married twice, to Catherine Cole (who became a children's writer under her married name) in 1942 and writer Catherine Peters in 1970 after the first marriage ended in divorce. This study challenges the widely-held view that success in personal relationships is the only key to happiness. It argues that we pay far too little attention to some of the other great satisfactions of life - work and creativity. In a series of biographical sketches it demonstrates how many of the creative geniuses of our civilization have been solitary, by temperament or circumstance, and how the capacity to be alone is, even for those who are not creative, a sign of maturity. HUMAN AGGRESSION Anthony Storr writes both as a psychotherapist and as someone who is living in an age in which the destruction of the world is a distinct possibility. But the coin of aggression, as he shows, bears two faces. He discusses its normal role as a positive and natural drive, in the social structure of both animals and humans and its function in childhood, adult life and sexual relations; its negative aspect he considers in relation to hostility, depressive, schizoid, paranoid and psychopathic personalities. He closes with a plea - modest, humane and never Utopian - for attitudes and policies that in the long run might reduce hostility between peoples and between nations. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 69 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION PATRICK TILLEY ‘extraordinary, original, mind-blowing’ - The Sunday Express MISSION What would you do if, through an unexpected twist of fate and time, you came face to face with Jesus of Nazareth? In the flesh. A living, breathing, threedimensional figure with a disconcertingly casual manner. When you had pinched yourself to make sure that you weren't dreaming and found that he was still there, would you turn your back and walk away - or would you try to find out what he was doing so far from home? That was the decision facing Leo Resnick, a smart young Manhattan lawyer, and his girlfriend, Dr Miriam Maxwell. Mission is Leo's record of his encounter with The Man. If you've ever looked up at the stars and wondered what it all means, this is the book you've been waiting for. Mission is the nearest you'll get to the Secret of the Universe this side of the Apocalypse. Born a man of Essex, Patrick Tilley spent his formative years in the border counties of Northumbria and Cumbria. After studying art at King's College, University of Durham, he came to London in 1955 and rapidly established himself as one of Britain's leading graphic designers. He began writing part-time in 1959 with three episodes for ATV's Crane. In 1968 he gave up design altogether in favour of a new career as a film scriptwriter. Work on several major British-based productions was followed by writing assignments in New York and Hollywood. Fade-out, his first book, has been translated into several languages, and since its appearance in 1974 has achieved cult-novel status. FADE-OUT Alien Day The date was Friday, the third of August. For some people the day was just beginning. For others it was the end of another perfectly normal day. Then right across the world every ground and airborne radar screen went haywire This time it had really happened. An alien spacecraft was in orbit around planet Earth. And nine weeks later civilization was on the edge of a total breakdown more devastating than any nuclear war or natural disaster. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 70 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE TALISMAN PROPHECY In AD 2015 the old world was destroyed in a nuclear war, which lasted only a few minutes, but annihilated the overwhelming majority of the human race. The Talisman Prophecy series follows the conflicts between the three main groups of survivors. The Amtrak Federation live in a network of underground cities covering much of southern America, connected by a hi-speed subterranean railway. Ruled by a self-perpetuating dynasty known as the First Family, the Federation is technologically advanced, although heavily susceptible to above ground radiation. The Mutes managed to survive the nuclear war and adapt to the radiation mutated into a clan-based warrior society. similar to Native Americans, the Mutes are primitive, employing spears and knives in combat. The Iron Masters have developed gunpowder and great steam-powered ships, but custom, religion and political decree forbids them from developing technology based on the 'Dark Light' (electricity). BIBLIOGRAPHY This series of six post-apocalyptic science fiction novels charts the battles between the various factions, as they fight for supremacy, and the struggle between magic and might. The Talisman Prophecy Cloud Warrior (1983) First Family (1985) Iron Master (1987) Blood River (1988) Death-Bringer (1989) Earth-Thunder (1990) Other novels Fade-Out (1975) Mission (1981) Xan (1986) Star Wartz (1995) Rights Sold: Chinese: Baihua Literature (Amtrak Wars Series) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 71 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION MARIE ‘MISSIE’ VASSILTCHIKOV THE BERLIN DIARIES 1940-1945 Marie ‘Missie’ Vassiltchikov was a White Russian emigree caught with her family in Hitler’s Germany at the outbreak of the war. Missie became sickened by the brutal and repressive nature of Nazi rule which overshadowed every aspect of her life. Through Adam von Trott, for whom she worked in the Information Department of the Foreign Ministry, she became involved in the Resistance and the diaries vividly describe her part in the drama of July 1944 and its appalling aftermath. Living among the ruins of Berlin during Allied bombing raids, she grows up to be a strongminded, committed and courageous woman as she daily displays uncommon bravery in the face of the Gestapo and the detestable Dr Six of the SS. Having survived the Nazis, Missie ends the diaries as she flees from Vienna, where she has been working as a nurse, before the advancing Red Army. "A skilful weaving of history, memoir, and autobiography… full of colourful characters… When she began writing in 1940, Missie, as she was called, was...concerned mainly with beaux and parties....By 1945 she has no more illusions. She has foraged for food....She has smelled the decaying flesh of corpses buried in the bombed ruins of Berlin and Vienna and lost some of her best friends." Washington Post Book World "Neither a set of reflections or a philippic, but a record… The best eyewitness account we possess of the bombing of Berlin." - Gordon A. Craig, The New York Times Book Review This remarkable historical document is one of the most extraordinary war diaries ever written. It is published in the UK by Pimlico, Random House. RIGHTS SOLD: UK: Pimlico, Random House US: Alfred A Knopf French: Phebus Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 72 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION ALEC WAUGH—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Pure entertainment in the best sense” - Scotsman THE LOOM OF YOUTH This semi-autobiographical work tells the story of Gordon Caruthers’ schooldays at the English public school, Fenhurst. From his confusion and isolation, through rebellious school escapades and relationships with fellow students, Alec Waugh reveals his own deep criticism of a system forcing pupils to conform to flawed ideals, and the inevitable consequences of thrusting thirteen year old children and eighteen year old adolescents together. The book caused a storm of controversy at the time and was banned in many schools. Today it can be rightly seen as a controversial comment on public school life, and a classic. Alexander Raban Waugh was a British novelist, the elder brother of Evelyn Waugh. Born in London, he wrote a number of diverse books including a guide to wine, of which he was a noted connoisseur. His book Island in the Sun and the Harry Belfonte title track provided inspiration, as well as the name, for the highly successful Island Records record label. BIBLIOGRAPHY The Loom of Youth (1917) BR Resentment Poems (1918) The Prisoners of Mainz (1919) Pleasure (1921) Public School Life: Boys, Parents, Masters (1922) The Lonely Unicorn (1922) Myself When Young: Confessions (1923) Card Castle (1924) Kept: A story of post-war London (1925) BR Love In These Days (1926) BR On Doing What One Likes (1926) Nor Many Waters (1928)BR The Last Chukka: Stories of East and West (1928) Three Score and Ten (1929) “Sir!” She Said (1930) BR The Coloured Countries (1930) Hot Countries (1930) BR Most Women (1931) So Lovers Dream (1931)BR Leap Before You Look (1932) No Quarter (1932) Thirteen Such Years (1932) Wheels Within Wheels (1933) BR The Balliols (1934)BR Jill Somerset (1936) Eight Short Stories (1937) Going Their Own Ways (1938) No Truce With Time (1941)BR His Second War (1944) The Sunlit Caribbean (1948) These Would I Choose (1948) Unclouded Summer (1948)BR The Sugar Islands: A Caribbean travelogue (1949)BR The Lipton Story (1950) Where the Clocks Chime Twice (1951) BR Guy Renton (1952) Island in the Sun (1955) BR Merchants of Wine: House of Gilbey (1957) The Sugar Islands: A collection of pieces written about the West Indies between 1928 and 1953 (1958) In Praise of Wine (1959) Fuel for the Flame (1960) BR My Place in the Bazaar (1961) BR The Early Years of Alec Waugh (1962) A Family of Islands: A History of the West Indies 1492 to 1898 (1964) BR Mule on the Minaret (1965) My Brother Evelyn and Other Portraits (1967) BR Foods of the World – Wines and Spirits (1968) A Spy in the Family (1970) BR Bangkok: the story of a city (1970) A Fatal Gift (1973) A Year to Remember:(1975)BR Married to a Spy (1976)BR The Best Wine Last: an autobiography through the years 1932-1969 (1978) GUY RENTON A novel of unusual breadth, this book captivatingly depicts the uncontrollable changing of times, while still holding true to the belief in the prevailing force of love. The story is an autobiographical and nostalgic reminiscence of the key points of Guy Renton’s life, spanning from the end of World War One to the beginning of World War Two, a reminiscence initiated by a young boy’s demand for Guy to remember. An Oxford graduate, war leader, international rugby football star, wine connoisseur, head of the family business and finally a spy in the military intelligence during the outbreak of the Second World War, Guy Renton’s life is a paradoxical mixture of success and disappointment. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 73 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION DENNIS WHEATLEY “One of the most popular storytellers of the century.” - Daily Telegraph RECENT SIGNING THE DEVIL RIDES OUT A group of old friends discover that one of them has been lured into a coven of Satanists. They determine to rescue him - and a beautiful girl employed as a medium. The head of the coven proves to be no charlatan but an Adept of the Dark Arts, able to infiltrate dreams and conjure up fearsome entities. De Richleau fights back with his own knowledge of occultism and ancient lore. A duel ensues between White and Black Magic, Good and Evil used as weapons. Dennis Yates Wheatley (8 January 1897 – 10 November 1977) was an English author. His prolific output of stylish thrillers and occult novels made him one of the world's best-selling authors from the 1930s through the 1960s. Wheatley mainly wrote adventure stories, with many books in a series of linked works. Background themes included the French Revolution (the Roger Brook series), Satanism (the Duke de Richleau series), World War II (the Gregory Sallust series) and espionage (the Julian Day series). His bibliography counts 66 titles. TO THE DEVIL A DAUGHTER RIGHTS SOLD: Why did the solitary girl leave her rented house on the French Riviera only for short walks at night? Why was she so frightened? Why did animals shrink away from her? The girl herself didn’t know, and was certainly not aware of the terrible appointment which had been made for her long ago and was now drawing close. Molly Fountain, the tough minded Englishwoman living next door, was determined to find the answer. She sent for a wartime secret service colleague to come and help. What they discovered was horrifying beyond anything they could have imagined. UK: Carlton Books Ltd (The Devil Rides Out, To The Devil A Daughter, Gateway to Hell) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 74 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION BIBLIOGRAPHY The Duke De Richleau series: The Forbidden Territory (January 1933) - filmed in 1934 The Devil Rides Out (December 1934) - filmed in 1968 The Golden Spaniard (August 1938) Three Inquisitive People (February 1940) Strange Conflict (April 1941) Codeword - Golden Fleece (May 1946) The Second Seal (November 1950) The Prisoner in the Mask (September 1957) Vendetta in Spain (August 1961) Dangerous Inheritance (August 1965) Gateway to Hell (August 1970) The Gregory Sallust series: Black August (January 1934) Contraband (October 1936) The Scarlet Impostor (January 1940) Faked Passports (June 1940) The Black Baroness (October 1940) V for Vengeance (March 1942) Come into My Parlour (November 1946) The Island Where Time Stands Still (September 1954) Traitors' Gate (September 1958) They Used Dark Forces (October 1964) The White Witch of the South Seas (August 1968) The Man Who Missed the War [Philip Vaudell] (November 1945) Other Science Fiction novels: Sixty Days to Live [Lavinia Leigh and others] (August 1939) Star of Ill-Omen [Kem Lincoln] (May 1952) The Julian Day series: The Quest of Julian Day (January 1939) The Sword of Fate (September 1941) Bill for the Use of a Body (April 1964) Other Adventure/ Espionage novels: Such Power is Dangerous [Avril Bamborough] (June 1933) The Fabulous Valley [The Heirs of John Thomas Long] (August 1934) The Eunuch of Stamboul [Swithin Destime] (July 1935) - filmed in 1936 as Secret of Stamboul The Secret War [Sir Anthony Lovelace, Christopher Pen, Valerie Lorne] (January 1937) Curtain of Fear [Nicholas Novák] (October 1953) Mayhem in Greece [Robbie Green] (August 1962) The Strange Story of Linda Lee [Linda Lee] (August 1972) The Roger Brook series: The Launching of Roger Brook (July 1947) The Shadow of Tyburn Tree (May 1948) The Rising Storm (October 1949) The Man Who Killed the King (November 1951) The Dark Secret of Josephine (March 1955) The Rape of Venice (October 1959) The Sultan's Daughter (August 1963) The Wanton Princess (August 1966) Evil in a Mask (August 1969) The Ravishing of Lady Mary Ware (August 1971) The Irish Witch (August 1973) Desperate Measures (September 1974) The Molly Fountain miniseries: To the Devil - a Daughter (January 1953) - filmed in 1976 The Satanist (August 1960) Other Occult novels: The Haunting of Toby Jugg [Toby Jugg] (December 1948) - filmed in 2006 as The Haunted Airman The Ka of Gifford Hillary [Gifford Hillary] (July 1956) Unholy Crusade ['Lucky' Adam Gordon] (August 1967) "Lost World" novels: They Found Atlantis [Camilla and others] (January 1936) Uncharted Seas [Various] (January 1938) - filmed in 1968 as The Lost Continent) 75 Short Story collections: Mediterranean Nights (October 1942, revised 1963) Gunmen, Gallants and Ghosts (June 1943, revised 1963) Historical Non-Fiction: Old Rowley: A Private Life of Charles II (September 1933) Red Eagle: The Story of the Russian Revolution and of Klementy Efremovitch Voroshilov, Marshal and Commissar for Defence of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics (October 1937) War Papers and Autobiographical: Total War (December 1941) Stranger than Fiction (February 1959) Saturdays with Bricks: And Other Days Under ShellFire (March 1961) The Time Has Come ... : The Memoirs of Dennis Wheatley: The Young Man Said 1897-1914 (1977) The Time Has Come ... : The Memoirs of Dennis Wheatley: Officer and Temporary Gentleman 1914-1919 (1978) The Time Has Come ... : The Memoirs of Dennis Wheatley: Drink and Ink 1919-1977 (1979) The Deception Planners: My Secret War (August 1980) GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION REBECCA WEST “Rebecca West was one of the giants and will have a lasting place in English literature. No one in this century wrote more dazzling prose, or had more wit, or looked at the intricacies of human character and the ways of the world more intelligently.” – William Shawn, The New Yorker THE RETURN OF THE SOLDIER Dame Rebecca West, DBE (1892 – 1983) was an author, journalist, literary critic and travel writer. A prolific author in many genres, West was committed to feminist and liberal principles and was one of the foremost public intellectuals of the twentieth century. She met H.G. Wells in 1913, after her provocatively damning review of his novel Marriage prompted him to invite her to lunch. They fell in love, though Wells was married at the time, and their affair lasted ten years producing a son. In 1947 Time magazine called West, ‘indisputably the world’s number one woman writer’ and in 1954 Kenneth Tynan described her as, ‘the best journalist alive’. She was made CBE in 1949, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to British letters. The soldier returns from the front to the three women who love him. His wife, Kitty, with her cold, moonlight beauty, and his devoted cousin Jenny wait in their exquisite home on the crest of the Harrowweald. Margaret Allington, his first and longforgotten love, is nearby in the dreary suburb of Wealdstone. But the soldier is shell-shocked and can only remember the Margaret he loved fifteen years before, when he was a young man and she an inn-keeper's daughter. His cousin he remembers only as a childhood playmate; his wife he remembers not at all. The women have a choice - to leave him where he wishes to be, or to 'cure' him. It is Margaret who reveals a love so great that she can make the final sacrifice. THE FOUNTAIN OVERFLOWS ‘A beautiful piece of writing’ – New York Times An instant bestseller when it was first published, The Fountain Overflows is Rebecca West’s acknowledged masterpiece. Rose Aubrey is one of a family of three sisters and their adored young brother, Richard Quin. Their father, Piers, is the disgraced son of an Irish landowning family, a violent noble, improvident and, when it suits his ends, quite unprincipled leader of popular causes. Piers’ streak of folly continually threatens his family with financial ruin and social disgrace, tragedies only narrowly averted by their mother, Clare, who becomes their tower of strength. 76 GENERAL FICTION AND NON-FICTION THE ESSENTIAL REBECCA WEST Uncollected Prose A dynamic selection of previously uncollected writing from Rebecca West, hailed as one of the greatest woman writers of the 20th century. West's wit and clear-eyed observations explore many of the great leaders and thinkers of modern times from Winston Churchill and Vladimir Nabokov to Aldous Huxley, Bertrand Russell and many others. Essays include a wrenching description of everyday life in wartime Britain and an excerpt from her last novel, "Survivors in Mexico," which vividly imagines the life and times of Montezuma and his fateful encounter with Cortes. BIBLIOGRAPHY Fiction The Return of the Soldier (1918) The Judge (1922) Harriet Hume (1929) The Harsh Voice: Four Short Novels (1935) The Thinking Reed (1936), The Fountain Overflows (1956) This Real Night (1984) Cousin Rosamund (1985) The Birds Fall Down (1966) Sunflower (1986) The Sentinel (2002) Non-fiction The Essential Rebecca West (2010) Henry James (1916) The Strange Necessity: Essays and Reviews (1928) Ending in Earnest: A literary Log (1931) St Augustine (1933) The Modern Rake’s Progress (co-authored with David Low, 1934) Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941) The Meaning of Treason (1949) The New Meaning of Treason (1964) A Train of Powder (1955) The Court and the Castle (1958) The Young Rebecca (1982) Family Memories: An Autobiographical Journey (1987) The Selected Letters of Rebecca West (2000), edited by Bonnie Kime Scott Survivors in Mexico (2003) Woman as Artist and Thinker (2005) RIGHTS SOLD BLACK LAMB, GREY FALCON UK: Virago (The Return of the Soldier, The Fountain Overflows, This Real Night, Cousin Rosamund, Sunflower; Harriet Hume; The Judge, The Harsh Voice, Canongate (Black Lamb, Grey Falcon) Catalan: Viena Ediciones (The Return of the Soldier) Chinese: Shanghai Sanhui Culture & Press (Black Lamb, Grey Falcon) German: Random House Audio (Black Lamb, Grey Falcon), Klaus Bitterman Verlag (Black Lamb Grey Falcon) Italian: Mattioli (The Thinking Reed, The Fountain Overflows, Indissoluble Matrimony, I regard Marriage With Horror and Fear), Neri Pozza (The Return of the Soldier), EDT Musica (Black Lamb, Grey Falcon) Portuguese: Geracao Editorial Ltda (The Return of the Soldier) Serbian: Algiritam (The Meaning of Treason), Mono and Manana (Black Lamb, Grey Falcon) Spanish: Herces Editores (The Return of the Soldier), Editorial Reino de Redonda (The Meaning of Treason), Historia para Todos (Survivors in Mexico), Zut Ediciones (Indissoluble Matrimony) Planeta (The Birds Fall Down, The Strange Necessity) “Written with a fierce intelligence that any journalist must envy and admire” – The Independent First published in 1942, Rebecca West’s epic masterpiece is widely regarded as the most illuminating book to have been written on the former state of Yugoslavia. It is a work of enduring value that remains essential for anyone attempting to understand the enigmatic history of the Balkan states, and the continuing friction in this fractured area of Europe. In 1937 West travelled to Yugoslavia with her husband and published Black Lamb, Grey Falcon, a polemic pro-Serbian travel diary. On the train to Zagreb, the capital of Croatia, she met an elderly German business man and his wife, whose misery with the Nazis, ‘seemed to have abolished every possible future for them. I reflected that if a train were filled with the citizens of the Western Roman Empire in the fourth century they would have made much the same complaints’. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 77 CHILDREN’S & Y.A. CHILDREN’S JOANNA CANNAN NEW SIGNING Joanna Cannan (1896-1961), was the youngest daughter of a distinguished Oxford don and inherited Scottish grit and determination from her mother. Often left to themselves‚ 'playing out romantic dramas based on favourite books' (DNB), the Cannan girls grew up to be self-reliant and bookish: May (Wedderburn Cannan) was a well-known First World War poet. Joanna hoped to go to the Slade but in 1918 married Captain Harold Pullein-Thompson and moved to Wimbledon. From 1922 onwards she became the joint family breadwinner, publishing a book a year until she died. In the 1930s the PulleinThompsons bought a house near Henley for their four children and numerous animals. Here Joanna wrote 300 words every morning in the sitting-room (emerging to find lunch cooked): novels, including Princes in the Land (1938), detective novels and the first pony book, a genre which her daughters Josephine, Diana and Christine were to make very much their own. Pony Books A Pony for Jean (1936) We Met Our Cousins (1937) Another Pony for Jean (1938) London Pride (1939) More Ponies for Jean (1943) They Bought Her A Pony (1944) Hamish: The Story of a Shetland Pony (1944) I Wrote A Pony Book (1950) Gaze at the Moon (1957) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 81 A PONY FOR JEAN Jean and her family have just moved out to the country. Her cousins give her a pony they call The Toastrack. She renames him Cavalier, and the rest of the book is about Jean learning to ride Cavalier and even learning to jump. ANOTHER PONY FOR JEAN This is the book in which the Jean tries, and fails, to build a bantam house. Jean has now been sent off to school with the rise in the family’s fortunes, and the action takes place in various school holidays. Jean hunts Cavalier, and finds her first aid practiced on the dining room table comes in handy when one of Lord Highmoor’s hunters hurts his leg badly. Jean gets a reward for her quick thinking... CHILDREN’S LOUISE COOPER “One of Britain’s finest authors of epic fantasy novels for both adults and children…Daydreaming in favour of learning at school should not usually be encouraged, yet has a very tempting advocate in Louise” – The Guardian DAUGHTER OF STORMS TRILOGY Louise Cooper (29 May 1952-21 October 2009) was a British fantasy writer who lived in Cornwall with her husband, Cas Sandall. Cooper was born in Hertfordshire. She began writing stories when she was at school to entertain her friends. She continued to write and her first full-length novel was published at the age of twenty. She moved to London in 1975 and worked in publishing before becoming a full-time writer in 1977. She became a prolific writer of fantasy, renowned for her bestselling Time Master trilogy. She published more than eighty fantasy and supernatural novels, both for adults and children. DAUGHTER OF STORMS Born during a double eclipse of the moons, Shar Tillmer is gifted with special powers. Though she is unaware of her heritage, she is of great value to others, who patiently lie waiting for such a soul. And as Shar starts to realise her gift, the terror begins. Cooper gained a great deal of writing inspiration from the coast and scenery, and her other interest included music, folklore, cooking, gardening and “messing about on the beach”. She was a treasurer of her local Lifeboat station and she and her husband both sang with the shanty group Falmouth Shout. THE DARK CALLER Cooper died aged 57 of a brain haemorrhage on 21 October 2009. Her husband survives her. Shar has a unique power – to harness good spirits, and to destroy anyone who threatens her. But now someone wants revenge. Lured into a web of terror and deceit, can Shar defy the forces that threaten her once again? And will the gods be on her side this time? 82 CHILDREN’S Creatures Series Once I Caught A Fish Alive (1998) If You Go Down to the Woods (1998) See How They Run (1998) Who's been Sitting in My Chair? (1999) Atishoo! Atishoo! All Fall Down! (1999) Give a Dog a Bone (1999) Daddy's Gone a-Hunting (2000) Incy Wincy Spider (2000) Here Comes a Candle (2000) KEEPERS OF LIGHT With her special abilities, Shar is driven to unlock the secrets of the Maze, a magical gateway through time. The Maze gives her the power to right an old wrong – but also to change the course of history. As she faces its many terrifying dimensions, will the Maze lead Shar into deadly temptation? Mirror, Mirror Series Breaking Through (2000) Running Free (2000) Testing Limits (2001) Seahorses Series Sea Horses (2003) The Talisman (2004) Gathering Storm (2004) The Last Secret (2005) Mermaid Curse Series The Silver Dolphin (2008) The Black Pearl (2008) The Rainbow Pool (2008) The Golden Circlet (2008) The Book of Paradox (1973) Crown of Horn (1981) The Blacksmith (1982) Mirage (1987) The Thorn Key (1988) The Sleep of Stone (1991) The King's Demon (1996) Firespell (1996) aka Heart of Fire Sacrament of Night (1997) The Hounds of Winter (1996) aka Heart of Ice Blood Dance (1996) aka Heart of Stone The Shrouded Mirror (1996) aka Heart of Glass Our Lady of the Snow (1998) Storm Ghost (1998) Creatures (1998) The Summer Witch (1999) Demon's Crossing (2002) Hunter's Moon (2003) Rip Tide (2003) Merrow (2005) The Bad Seed (2008) BIBLIOGRAPHY Blood Summer Series Blood Summer (1976) In Memory of Sarah Bailey (1976) Time Master Series Lord of No Time (1977) The Initiate (1985) The Outcast (1986) The Master (1987) Indigo Series Nemesis (1989) Inferno (1989) Infanta (1990) Nocturne (1990) Troika (1991) Avatar (1992) Revenant (1993) Aisling (1994) Chaos Gate Series The Deceiver (1991) The Pretender (1992) The Avenger (1992) Star Shadow Series Star Ascendant (1994) Eclipse (1994) Moonset (1995) Collections Creatures at Christmas (1999) The Spiral Garden (2000) Short and Scary! (2002) Short and Spooky (2005) Daughters of Storms Series Daughter of Storms (1996) The Dark Caller (1997) Keepers of Lights (1998) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 83 CHILDREN’S MONICA DICKENS CHARLES DICKENS BICENTENARY 2012 Part of Bloomsbury Reader “It is life itself that is caught up in the pages of her books” – Rebecca West THE FOLLYFOOT SERIES Monica was born in London in 1915, the greatgranddaughter of Charles Dickens. While her father and grandfather pursued the legal profession which was Charles Dickens first career, his great-granddaughter followed in his literary steps. Her light and witty novels became hugely popular in their time for being ‘funny, poignant and perfect period pieces’ (The Sunday Telegraph). By many horse-loving children Monica Dickens will be remembered as the creator of Follyfoot, a popular ITV series in the early 70s. It formed the base for the subsequent children’s books series. At Follyfoot Farm, the Colonel looks after old and illtreated horses, helped by his stepdaughter, Callie, and two stablehands, Dora and Steve. Life can never be dull for young Callie or her family. There is always so much to do on the farm – tending unwanted horses, providing mounts for film companies, schooling ponies, helping unlucky holidaymakers and keeping a wary eye on the unscrupulous owners of the Pinecrest riding stables… Follyfoot was reissued by Andersen Press in the UK July 2010. and Dora at Follyfoot in July 2011. THE WORLD’S END SERIES This truly wonderful children’s books series was published in the early 70s. These four books tell the story of the four Fielding children who, with their parents out of the picture, must learn to survive on their own and later with their parents who return much changed. They must hide from the world in an old house they find one day, shield their unsupervised status and discover how to live for themselves. 84 CHILDREN’S BIBLIOGRAPHY RIGHTS SOLD Children’s Fiction Follyfoot Series Follyfoot (1971) Dora at Follyfoot (1972) The Horses of Follyfoot (1975) Stranger at Follyfoot (1976) New Arrival at Follyfoot (1995) UK: Persephone (Mariana; The Winds of Heaven), Anderson (Follyfoot; Dora at Follyfoot) World’s End Series The House at World’s End (1970) BR Summer at World’s End (1971) BR World’s End in Winter (1972) BR Spring Comes to World’s End (1973) BR Messenger Series The Ballad of Favour (1985) The Messenger (1985) Cry of a Seagull (1986 The Haunting of Bellamy 4 (1986) General Fiction and Non-Fiction One Pair of Hands (1939) Mariana (1940) One Pair of Feet (1942) The Fancy (1943) BR Thursday Afternoons (1945) The Happy Prisoner (1946) BR Joy and Josephine (1948) BR Flowers on the Grass (1949) My Turn To Make The Tea (1951) No More Meadows (1953) BR The Winds of Heaven (1955) The Angel in the Corner (1956) BR Man Overboard (1958) BR The Heart of London (1961) BR The Room Upstairs (1964) Kate and Emma (1965) BR The Landlord’s Daughter (1968) The Listeners (1970) BR Talking of Horses (1973) Last Year When I Was Young (1974) The Great Escape (1975) An Open Book (1980) A Celebration (1984) A View From The Seesaw (1986) Dear Doctor Lily (1988) BR Enchantment (1989) BR Closed at Dusk (1990) BR Scarred (1991) One of the Family (1993) BR Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 85 CHILDREN’S ERIC LINKLATER—Part of Bloomsbury Reader “Eric Linklater is not primarily a novelist, or an essayist or a dramatist. He is above all else an enchanting prose poet. These fragments of wonderful singing prose are scattered all over his books, and through them English literature is permanently enriched.” – George Mackay Brown THE WIND ON THE MOON Winner of the Carnegie Medal Eric Linklater (1899–1974) wrote scores of novels for adults and children. He was also a journalist in India, commander of a wartime fortress in the Orkney Islands, and rector of Aberdeen University. BIBLIOGRAPHY Fiction White Maa’s Saga (1929) Poet’s Pub (1929) The Men of Ness (1932) The Crusader’s Key (1933) The Impregnable Women (1938) BR Judas (1939) A Spell for Old Bones (1949) BR The Dark of Summer (1956) BR A Sociable Plover and other Stories and Conceits (1957) A Man Over Forty (1963) BR A Terrible Freedom (1966) BR The Wind on the Moon (1944) The Pirates in the Deep Green Sea (1949) BR Drama The Devil’s in the News (1929) Non-Fiction Juan in America (1931) Magnus Merriman (1934) Juan in China Ben Jonson and King James: Biography and Portrait (1931) Ripeness is All (1935) The Man on My Back (1941) Private Angelo (1946) Laxdale Hall (1951) Figures in a Landscape (1952) A Year of Space (1953) The Merry Muse (1959) BR The Survival of Scotland (1968) The Campaign in Italy The Highland Division The Northern Garrisons (1941) In the English village of Midmeddlecum, Major Palfrey asks his two daughters to behave themselves while his is off at war. Dinah sighs, ‘I think that we are quite likely to be bad, however hard we try not to be,’ and her sister Dorinda adds helpfully, ‘Very often, when we think we are behaving well, some grown-up person says we are really quite bad. It’s difficult to tell which is which.’ Sure enough, the mischievous sisters soon convince a judge that minds must be changed as often as socks, stage an escape from a local zoo (thanks to a witch’s potion which turns them into kangaroos), and – in the company of a golden puma and a silver falcon – set off to rescue their father from the tyrant of Bombardy. RIGHTS SOLD UK: Vintage (The Wind on the Moon) Capuchin (Juan in America) German: DTV (The Wind on the Moon) Swedish: Norstedts (The Wind on the Moon) Thai: Matichon Publishing House (The Wind on the Moon) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 86 CHILDREN’S BILL NAUGHTON—Part of Bloomsbury Reader THE GOALKEEPER’S REVENGE Bill Naughton (1910–1992) was a British playwright and author best known for his plays Spring and Port Wine and Alfie, the latter which he adapted for screen in the iconic 1966 film starring Michael Caine. Born in Ireland, he grew up in Lancashire and his writing contains vivid evocations of the impoverished mining communities of the North of England, bound together by ties of family, kith and kin. Bill Naughton won the Screenwriters award 1967 and 1968 and the Prix Italia for Radio Play 1974 before settling in the Isle of Wight where he wrote several children’s books based on his childhood memories. One of a series of top-quality fiction for schools, this is a collection of stories of a Lancashire childhood, of football in the streets, fishing, fighting and school, of growing up and looking for work, and of characters such as Spit Nolan the champion trolley-rider, and Sam Dalt the goalkeeper. PONY BOY Written with humour and understanding, this excellent story deals with the escapades of Corky and Ginger, two of the scores of Pony Boys employed to deliver light loads in the 1930s. As the story continues, the urge takes the boys to see the world and they head for Liverpool with the idea of getting jobs on a trawler. BIBLIOGRAPHY Pony Boy (1966) BR The Goalkeeper’s Revenge (1967) BR A Dog Called Nelson (1976) My Pal Spadger (1977) Spit Nolan (1988) Ricky, Karim and Spit Nolan: Adventure Short Stories (2003) (with Jenny Alexander & Pratima Mitchell) A DOG CALLED NELSON Set in Lancashire in the 1930s, this collection of stories introduces Nelson, the one-eyed, canine companion of Bill and Noggy, his guardians while Uncle Gus is at sea. However, it is really Nelson who is the guardian, sharing the boys’ street corner chat and accompanying them to the cinema and theatre. When Uncle Gus is on shore leave Nelson becomes the proud drinking companion of his master. It is drink that leads to his demise and the ensnaring of Uncle Gus by the officious local spinster. Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 87 CHILDREN’S MERVYN PEAKE - CENTENARY YEAR “Peake’s books are actual additions to life; they give, like certain rare dreams, sensations we have never had before, and enlarge our conception of the range of the possible experience.” – C.S. Lewis Born of British parents in China in 1911, Mervyn Peake was an acclaimed writer, artist, poet and illustrator. He is best known for his Gormenghast books (three works conceived as part of a cycle, the completion of which was halted by his death). Amazingly, a fourth book in the series called Titus Awakes, written by Peake’s widow, Maeve Gilmore, from detailed notes left by the author, was recently discovered by Peake’s granddaughter in the attic of their family home. 2011 makes the centenary of Mervyn Peake’s birth. PFD will be celebrating the occasion with new editions of his work (with specially commissioned introductions and never before published illustrations), exhibitions and films. CAPTAIN SLAUGHTERBOARD DROPS ANCHOR Captain Slaughterboard is the most ferocious and wicked pirate you could ever imagine. He likes nothing better than cutting people up with his cutlass or making them walk the plank. Then one day, on a remote island, he spies a strange Yellow Creature – and from that time on, he’s a changed man. How he loves the Yellow Creature! They become the best of friends, always together, sailing the oceans. But will Captain Slaughterboard ever drop anchor for good? His daughter, Clare, has written Under a Canvas Sky, an autobiographical account of her parents’ romance and her own memories of her happy bohemian childhood, which was published by Constable and Robinson in 2011. ALICE’S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND/ SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON/ TREASURE ISLAND/ DR JEKYLL & MR HYDE/THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK/ HOUSEHOLD TALES BY THE BROTHERS GRIMM ‘In these drawings fear, terror, evil and humour are captured, and transfixed’ - The Glasgow Herald of Treasure Island (1949) Mervyn Peake’s famous illustrations of these bestloved classics have touched and thrilled generations of children and continue to do so today. 88 CHILDREN’S BIBLIOGRAPHY RIGHTS SOLD The White Chief of the Unzimbooboo Kaffirs (1921) Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor (1939) Shapes and Sounds (1941) Rhymes without Reason (1944) Titus Groan (1946) The Craft of the Lead Pencil (1946) Letters from a Lost Uncle (from Polar Regions) (1948) Drawings by Mervyn Peake (1949) Gormenghast (1950) The Glassblowers (1950) Mr Pye (1953) Figures of Speech (1954) Titus Alone (1959) The Rhyme of the Flying Bomb (1962) Poems and Drawings (1965) A Reverie of Bone and other Poems (1967) Selected Poems (1972) A Book of Nonsense (1972) The Drawings of Mervyn Peake (1974) Mervyn Peake: Writings and Drawings (1974) Twelve Poems (1975) Boy in Darkness (1976) Peake’s Progress (1978) Ten Poems (1993) Eleven Poems (1995) The Cave (1996) Boy in Darkness and other stories (2007) Collected Poems (2008) The Gormenghast Trilogy Chinese: Linking Publishing Company Czech: Argo Danish: Forlaget Ries Dutch: Meulenhoff German: Klett Cotta Hungarian: Pecsi Direkt Italian: Adelphi Portuguese: Saida de Emergencia Serbian: Okean Spanish: Planeta US: Overlook French: Gallimard (Mr Pye, Boy in Darkness), Joie de Lire (Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor), Calmann Levy (Alice in Wonderland) Italian: Mondadori (Letters From a Lost Uncle) UK and US: Walker Books (Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor) British Library Publishing (Grimms Fairytales) UK: Bloomsbury (Alice in Wonderland) Russian: Eksmo (Alice in Wonderland) Korean: Company of Books (Treasure Island) Illustrated Books Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor (by himself) (1939) Ride a Cock Horse and Other Nursery Rhymes (1940) Hunting of the Snark (by Lewis Carroll) Alice in Wonderland (by Lewis Carroll) The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (by Samuel Taylor Coleridge) Household Tales (by the Brothers Grimm) All This and Bevin Too (by Quentin Crisp) Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (by Robert Louis Stevenson) Treasure Island (by Robert Louis Stevenson) Droll Stories (by Balzac) (1961) The Rhyme of the Flying Bomb (by himself) (1962) Titus Groan, Gormenghast and Titus Alone (by himself; several editions include an abundance of illustrations, on plates in the centre and/or distributed through the text) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 89 Y.A. MAZO DE LA ROCHE NEW SIGNING BIBLIOGRAPHY Explorers of the Dawn Low Life and Other (1922) Plays (contains Low Possession (1923) Life, Come True, and The Low Life: A Comedy in One Return of the Emigrant, Act (play, 1925) 1929) Delight (1926) Portrait of a Dog (1930) Come True (1927) Lark Ascending (1932) Jalna series (in narrative The Thunder of the New order) Wings, (1932) (January 15, 1879 – July 12, 1961), born Mazo Building of Jalna, (1944) Beside a Norman Tower, Louise Roche in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada, (1934) Morning at Jalna, (1960) was the author of the Jalna novels, one of the Whiteoaks: A Play (adapted most popular series of books of her time. Her Mary Wakefield, (1949) from Whiteoaks of Jalna, books became best-sellers and she wrote 16 Young Renny, (1935) 1936) novels in the series known as the Jalna series Whiteoak Heritage, (1940) The Very Little House (1937) or the Whiteoak Chronicles. The series tells Whiteoak Brothers, (1953) Growth of a Man (1938) the story of one hundred years of the Jalna, (1927) Whiteoak family covering from 1854 to 1954. The Sacred Bullock and OthWhiteoaks of Jalna, (1929) The novels were not written in sequential er Stories of Animals, (1939) order, however, and each can be read as an Finch's Fortune, (1932) The Two Saplings (1942) The Master of Jalna, (1933) independent story. Quebec: Historic Seaport (1944) The Jalna series has sold more than eleven Whiteoak Harvest, (1936) million copies in 193 English and 92 foreign Wakefield's Course, (1941) Mistress of Jalna, (1951) editions. In 1935, the film Jalna, based on the Return to Jalna, (1946) A Boy in the House, and novel, was released by RKO Radio Renny's Daughter, (1951) Other Stories, (1952) Pictures and, in 1972, a CBC television series Variable Winds at Jalna, The Song of Lambert (1956) was produced based on the series. (1954) Ringing the Changes: An Centenary at Jalna, (1958) Autobiography, (1957) The Return of the JALNA Bill and Coo (juvenile), Emigrant (play, 1928) Jalna was the first of the “Whiteoaks” novels to (1959) appear, although it stands fifth in the time sequence of the saga. It was an immediate and spectacular success, introducing Adeline Whiteoak, the indomitable old grandmother; Piers, who has caused a tumult by marrying Pheasant without consulting the family; Eden, the poet, with his strange American wife, Alayne; and a host of other wonderful characters, old and young. Each of the “Whiteoaks” novel is a complete and satisfying story on its own right—together they RIGHTS SOLD present one of the most remarkable literary achievements of the century. US & Canadian: Dundurn group Ltd (The Jalna Series) French: Editions Omnibus (The Jalna Series) Spanish: Santillana Ediciones (Building of Jalna) Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 90 CHILDREN’S MARGERY SHARP “Margery Sharp is an adept describer of situations; whether comic or merely piquant, embarrassing or exciting. Her dialogue is brilliant, uncannily true. Her taste is excellent: she is an excellent story teller” – Tatler Margery Sharp was born in 1905, and died in 1991. She is best known for her books for children, but she also wrote for adults. She was a prolific writer in her long career: twenty-six novels for adults, fourteen stories for children, four plays, two mysteries, as well as numerous short stories. BIBLIOGRAPHY Fiction Rhododendron Pie (1930) Fanfare for Tin Trumpets (1932) The Nymph and The Nobleman (1932) The Flowering Thorn (1934) Sophy Cassmajor (1934) Four Gardens (1935) The Nutmeg Tree (1937) Harlequin House (1939) The Stone of Chastity (1940) Three Companion Pieces (1941) Cluny Brown (1944) Britannia Mews (1946) The Foolish Gentlewoman (1948) Lise Lillywhite (1951) The Gipsy in the Parlour (1954) Something Light (1960) The Sun in Scorpio (1965) In Pious Memory (1967) Rosa (1970) The Innocents (1972) The Lost Chapel Picnic and Other Stories (1973) The Faithful Servants (1975) Summer Visits (1977) The Eye of Love (1957) Martha in Paris (1962) Martha, Eric and George (1964) Children’s Fiction Melisande (1960) Lost at the Fair (1965) The Magical Cockatoo (1974) The Children Next Door (1974) The Rescuers Series The Rescuers (1959) Miss Bianca (1962) The Turret (1963) Miss Bianca in the Salt Mines (1966) Miss Bianca in the Orient (1970) Miss Bianca in the Antarctic (1971) Miss Bianca and the Bridesmaid (1972) THE RESCUERS Bianca and Bernard, agents for The Prisoners’ Aid Society of Mice, rescue prisoners and outwit villains in this enchanting story, made world-famous by the Walt Disney film. The Prisoners’ Aid Society of Mice discusses the proposed rescue of a Norwegian poet from the terrible Black Castle. Miss Bianca, the pet white mouse belonging to the Ambassador’s son, is sent to Norway on a mission to recruit the bravest Norwegian mouse she can find. She finds Nils, and brings him back triumphantly. Then she, Nils, and Bernard, a pantry mouse who falls in love with her, set off for the Black Castle. They set up home in a mouse-hole in the Chief Jailer’s room, and narrowly avoid the jaws of Mamelouk the cruel Persian cat. Eventually they trick the cat and the jailer, and get into the prisoner’s cell. A dramatic rescue via an underground river, and they are all free – and the Nils and Miss Bianca medal for bravery is struck in the mice’s honour! RIGHTS SOLD UK: HarperCollins Essential Modern Classics Italian: Mondadori Japanese: Iwanami Shoten Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 91 CHILDREN’S CATHERINE STORR—part of Bloomsbury Reader “It was her readers' good fortune that she wrote so much, and her friends' good fortune that her company was as stimulating as her books.” – The Independent THE MIRROR IMAGE GHOST Lisa is certain she has seen a ghost in the reflections of her Mother’s bedroom mirror. There is no one she can confide in: not her grandparents, who are oddly secretive about the subject of ghosts and the past; nor her mother who seems preoccupied since her recent marriage to Laurent; and she definitely won’t tell her new step-brother and sister – they are French and she hates them! As her war with Pierre and Alice gets fiercer, Lisa finds herself drawn into the world beyond the mirrors and realises that the events of fifty years ago cannot be ignored. What she does now might change things for her whole family – her grandparents, her mother, Pierre, Alice and, most importantly, for Lisa herself. Catherine Storr (21 July 1913 – 8 January 2001) was an English author best known for her novel Marianne Dreams and for the series of books about a wolf ineptly pursuing a young girl, beginning with Clever Polly and the Stupid Wolf. Married to psychologist Anthony Storr for over 20 years, her books often involve children confronting their fears. THE CHINESE EGG Brought together by a Chinese egg puzzle, three young people become involved in a dangerous search for a missing baby. 92 CHILDREN’S BIBLIOGRAPHY General Children’s Fiction Stories for Jane (1952) Polly, the Giant’s Bride (1956) Lucy (1961) Lucy Runs Away (1962) Robin (1962) Catchpole Story (1965) Rufus (1969) Puss and Cat (1969) Kate and the Island (1970) The Chinese Egg (1975) BR The Story of the Terrible Scar (1976) Who’s Bill? (1976) Winter’s End (1978) Pebble (1979) The Bugbear (1981) Vicky (1981) February Yowler (1982) Castle Boy (1983) Two’s Company (1984) It Shouldn’t Happen to a Frog (1984) The Boy and the Swan (1984) Cold Marble and Other Ghost Stories (1987) The Underground Conspiracy (1987) Daljit and the Unqualified Wizard (1989) The Spy Before Yesterday (1990) CLEVER POLLY AND THE STUPID WOLF Once upon a time the front door bell rang and Polly went to open the door. There was a great black wolf who said he had come to eat her up. This collection of stories feature a wolf trying to catch a little girl: the wolf takes his always impractical subterfuges from fairy tales, but is outmatched by Polly every time. Finn’s Animal (1992) The Mirror Image Ghost (1994) Watcher At the Window The If Game BR Christian Children’s Fiction (Selected) People of the Bible (1982) The Birth of Jesus (1982) Jesus Begins His Work (1982) Joseph and His Brothers (1982) Noah and His Ark (1982) Adam and Eve (1983) Jonah and the Whale (1983) Miracles By the Sea (1983) The Prodigal Son (1983) The First Easter (1984) Abraham and Isaac (1985) David and Goliath (1985) Jesus and John the Baptist (1985) Moses and the Plagues (1985) St. Peter and St. Paul (1985) The Trials of Daniel (1985) RIGHTS SOLD THURSDAY Thursday Townsend has been missing for a week when his friend, Bee, recovering from a serious illness, hears about it. She initiates her own private search to find him. When he is put into a mental hospital for treatment, Bee visits him and starts the long process of pulling Thursday back into the real world. This is a beautifully written novel in which many side issues – race, intermarriage, happiness in middle-age – are raised within a young girl’s open, honest and warm relationship with her family. UK: Faber (The Mirror Image Ghost), Jane Nissen Books (Clever Polly and the Stupid Wolf; Polly and the Wolf Again) Chinese: Shanghai Gaotan Culture Co. Ltd Translation Rights Contact: Camilla Shestopal 93 CONTACT Camilla Shestopal Agent, Creative Literary Rights PFD Drury House 34–43 Russell Street London WC2B 5HA Tel: + 44 20 7344 1000 Email: cshestopal@pfd.co.uk