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War Poets CD

I have always liked poetry, and although I've not written any since I left school, I like to read poetry when I am working on a novel. I often find great inspiration in the words and images of both classical and modern poets.

The reason I don't like to read fiction, certainly during the writing of the first draft of my novels, is that it is so easy to become influenced, unintentionally by someone else's style or rhythm.

Many years ago I met a young schoolboy poet, Antony Dunn and helped to sponsor the first published collection of his work. I was very thrilled when a few years later, in 1995, he won the Newdigate Prize for Poetry at Oxford - one of the most prestigious poetry prizes in our country - one of its previous winners was one of my great literary heroes, Oscar Wilde!

I have now sponsored another poetry venture in which this very talented young man is involved, this time a CD of the work of the War Poet, Rupert Brooke ("If I should die, think only this of me...") , which has been made to accompany a one-man show of the work of this remarkable poet, who died in 1915. On the CD poems are read by an array of talent, including the Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion.

It is non profit making, with £1 from every copy sold to be donated to the Armed Forces Memorial Appeal, and the rest of the money goes to the production fund for the show itself. To download an MP3 of the Rupert Brooke poem Love, click here. To buy the CD online, visit the website of The Useful Donkey Theatre Company who produced it.

The First World War "War Poets" of which Rupert Brooke was the first of many to die, had a profound impact on me as a teenager, and I think had a profound impact on shaping our views on war, changing it from something of glory, as it had been perceived in the past, to something horrific as you can see in the words of another, Siegfried Sassoon:


Attack
At dawn the ridge emerges massed and dun
In the wild purple of the glow'ring sun,
Smouldering through spouts of drifting smoke that shroud
The menacing scarred slope; and, one by one,
Tanks creep and topple forward to the wire.
The barrage roars and lifts. Then, clumsily bowed
With bombs and guns and shovels and battle-gear,
Men jostle and climb to meet the bristling fire.
Lines of grey, muttering faces, masked with fear,
They leave their trenches, going over the top,
While time ticks blank and busy on their wrists,
And hope, with furtive eyes and grappling fists,
Flounders in mud. O Jesus, make it stop!

Cooking Pot Quiz Answers

Thanks all of you who took part in my What's Cooking quiz! Some of your answers were quite brilliant and really made me smile.

Well, no one actually got all three answers right, although Steve Hargrave, Helen Bayley and Julie Hargrave came close!

The correct answers are that it was indeed Dennis Nilsen who was the owner. In the pot when the police entered his home was a male human head. But the picture was taken in the so called "Black Museum" at New Scotland Yard, where these delightful objects now permanently reside, still in their original filthy state.

The Black Museum is used for training detectives so all items, such as bloodstained knives taken from crime scenes, are kept deliberately as found for the detectives to see.

So I'm going to award a paperback to each of you, Steve, Helen and Julie - can you email me to scary@pavilion.co.uk the address you would like the book sent to.

It has been hard to decide on which is the wittiest of the other replies, as I love them all, but I'm going to give it to Jacqueline Twamley for her very clever answer!

Jacqueline also please email me a postal address.

A huge thanks to all who took part!

Interview at Shots Magazine

There's an in depth interview with me at Shots Magazine, the result of a very pleasant (and very long!) lunch at Christmas with the Shots Editors [Mike Stotter and Ali Karim], together with Barry Forshaw [Editor of Crime Time and The Encyclopaedia of British Crime Fiction] and Carla McKay [crime-fiction critic of the Daily Mail].

The interview seems to cover my entire life (!) and in it I talk about why I was asked to leave Charterhouse school, what Al Pacino is really like, my out of body experiences, and also drop some hints about what will happen in the next Roy Grace novel Dead Tomorrow.

Follow the link for the full interview.

A Deadly Duel

Peter James on the slopes
PJ in hot pursuit on the slopes!


So, moving on from grimy ovens to fresh white snow.... (the competition stays open for another week!) I thought you might be amused by this cartoon of me that appears in the current issue of the Ski Club of Great Britain publication, Ski & Board.

As the son of an Austrian mother, I was dragged off to the ski slopes from the age of 4 -- and my early years of skiing in the Austrian mountains were, incredibly, before safety bindings of any sort had been invented -- and I'm not that old!!! It was the start of a lifelong passion with the sport -- and I find today that I write in few places better than in the mountains in winter. Skiing has featured in one of my novels, Dreamer, and I'm working on a future Roy Grace scenario in a ski resort.

Although I have always enjoyed a variety of sports, the only one for which I had real aptitude was skiing, and when I was fifteen I was invited to join the British Olympic Ski Team, but my parents discouraged it, fearing it would mess up my school studies. So, skiing's loss is literature's dubious gain...

Behind the cartoon (and accompanying article) lies a truly deadly duel with Arnie Wilson, a good friend and the ski writer for the Financial Times as well as now editor of Ski & Board. It all came out of an argument about ten years ago. Many of those of you who are skiers will remember that skiing for amateurs was revolutionized about ten years ago by the invention of "carver" skis, which enabled any novice, within a few days, to be making turns as good as the experts.

Arnie was one of their early champions, and we got into endless anorak-style arguments about the relative merits of the traditional ski versus the carver. My point was that a good skier would still ski better on a traditional ski. It was finally resolved in a race between us, down an unpisted mountainside in one one skiing's wildest - but most fabulous resorts - Jackson Hole in Wyoming. And guess who won????! Arnie has been trying to get even with me ever since - hence the cartoon and the story in the article...

You can read the full article here.

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