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Showing posts with label Lost in Flames. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lost in Flames. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 June 2012

Lost in the Flames Q5 & Q6


There's just a week to go for our double signing and there's double the questions too.

Tony
There is copious detail about the town of Chipping Norton of the period. How was this researched?
Christopher
I’ve lived in Chipping Norton for a few years, and the house in which I live is Jacob’s house – even if it’s larger in fiction than I could manage in reality – so I know its moods, I know the setting. In terms of the historical detail, I did plenty of reading on the internet, visited the local museum, spoke to neighbours, referred to books of old photos, went for walks around town.

Tony
The characters in the book, particularly the country characters, are very clearly defined. Were they based on real people?
Christopher
As mentioned before, Jacob’s experiences are to a significant degree based on Jackie’s, so in that sense there must be similarities between them – but I never met Jackie, of course, so I can’t say to what degree their characters overlap. The Norman character is very much based on my grandfather and shares many of his character traits and life experiences – a simple, good man, strong as an ox, strapped to a plough in a brown-clod northern field when nine years old, a farm-worker from that day on, a victim of bastard taunts and injustice, losing his father under the wheels of a bus and losing his inheritance as a result, a contract on a farm for 364 working days a year, dawn till dusk, Christmas day the only holiday. The real Norman loved his animals too, but never left the north, working in his native County Durham and neighbouring Northumberland until he retired. Incidentally, the real Norman loved coming to Chipping Norton, even though he never lived here. In real life, Jackie looked up to Norman – just as Jacob looks up to Norman in the book – and hoped when he was a boy that he would grow up to be just like him, but concluded during his time in Bomber Command that there was not much chance of that happening any more (it is unclear from his letter whether he said this because he felt that Bomber Command and the war had changed him to the point that he could no longer be like Norman, or simply because he did not expect to live long enough to grow to be like him). In another letter, when writing about a girl he loved, Jackie compares her to Norman, says she ‘has his ways and his kindness’ and that this has a lot to do with ‘the way I love her so’. In the book I have mirrored this relationship, and have added the fictional Norman, when putting the young Jacob to bed at night, wishing that he too could have been a boy just like Jacob – loved by his family – when he was growing up. So while the central love story in Lost in the Flames is between Jacob and Rose, there is another one too, between Jacob and Norman, the man Jacob loves ‘like a father or a brother or something in between’.
All the other characters are fictional, though many of them must share an amalgamation of the characteristics of people I’ve known in real life.

Friday, 1 June 2012

Signing error


If you receive your copy of
The Bourton/Moreton/Stow/Chippy Times through the door in the next few days,
you will notice that the twits at
Cotswold Bookstore have advertised
a book signing on 23rd May.

Of course, it should read 23rd June!

2012!

That's when Christopher Jory will be signing Lost in Flames and Derek J Taylor will be signing A Horse in the Bathroom.

Christopher will be bringing with him an original bomber jacket used by an RAF airman in the war, some pieces from a Lancaster shot down over Holland, a small navigational 'computer' used in Lancasters, a photo of the airman to whom the book is dedicated and perhaps copies of one or two of his letters.

Derek will not be bringing the horse.

Monday, 28 May 2012

Book News 44

Our latest Book News is now in the shop containing our thoughts on The Iron Will of Shoeshine Cats by Hesh Kestin, Gods of Gotham by Lindsaye Faye, Geekhood by Andy Robb and The Mystery of Wickworth Manor by Elen Caldecott.

There's news of our next book signing - a double with Christopher Jory's Lost in Flames and Derek J Taylor's A Horse in the Bathroom.

A first for us is the inclusion of a piece of poetry. Local poet, cartoonist and character, John Curtis, has a new book of poems out called On White Horse Hill which contains many insightful poems on the Cotswold Landscape. I confess to not being particularly enthusiastic about poetry but I really enjoy John's work.

If you'd like to meet John, he is often in the shop on Tuesday and Friday mornings at about 11am. We wonder if enough people would be interested in a poetry reading by John, perhaps one evening at a cafe in Moreton-in-Marsh? Please let us know.