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review 2014-03-11 23:13
Dr Syn
Doctor Syn - Russell Thorndike

bookshelves: adventure, britain-england, historical-fiction, seven-seas, re-read, winter20092010, fraudio, pirates-smugglers-wreckers, revenge

Read in December, 2009




Dr Syn by Andrew Wyeth

The swashbuckling scholar finds love and encounters a dastardly squire. Russell Thorndike's adventure read by Broadcast on:
BBC Radio 7, 1:30pm Monday 7th December 2009
Duration:
80 minutes

---
Foreword by Daniel Thorndike
Preface by Sybil Thorndike
Time setting - The reign of King George III

First sentence of Chapter 1 Dymchurch-under-the-Wall:

To those who have a small knowledge of Kent, be it known that the fishing village of Dymchurch-under-the-wall lies on the south coast midway between two of the ancient Cinque Ports, Romney and Hythe.

Oh, here's to the feet that have walked the plank -
Yo-Ho! for the dead man's throttle;
And here's to the corpses afloat in the tank,
And the dead man's teeth in the bottle.

A pound of gunshot tied to his feet,
And a ragged bit of sail for a winding-sheet -
Then Out to the sharks with a horrible splash,
And that's the end of Mister Rash

And all that isn't ripped by the sharks outside
Stands up on it's feet with the running tide,
And it kept a-blowing gently, and a-looking with surprise,
At the little crabs a-scrambling from the sockets of its eyes.

 

It's all about smugglers - a reread for me from xxx years ago. I used to holiday as a youngster in a bungalow called Bandbox in Greatstone and the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway used to go by the tennis court at the bottom of the garden.



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review 2014-01-05 16:22
Season of Migration to the North
Season of Migration to the North - Denys Johnson-Davies,Ṭayyib Ṣāliḥ,Ṭayyib Ṣāliḥ

bookshelves: published-1966, winter20092010, african-continent, fraudio, too-sexy-for-maiden-aunts, afr-sudan, radio-3

Read from January 21 to 22, 2010

 

** spoiler alert ** Season of Migration to the North
By Tayeb Salih
Translated by Denys Johnson-Davies
Dramatised by Philip Palmer.

From the description: The late Tayeb Salih's wry and sensual masterpiece has been described as the most important Arab novel of the 20th century. First published in Arabic in 1966, ten years after Sudan's independence, it's a hall of mirrors which conjures poetry and suspense from the ambivalence of the colonial legacy. A young man returning from studying in Europe to his beloved village 'on the bend in the Nile' unravels a tale which will lead to murder.

Suleyman......Beru Tessema
Mustafa Sa'eed....Zubin Varla
Mahjoub........Philip Arditti
Hosna Bint Mahmoud.Farzana Dua Elahe
Hajj Ahmed......Nadim Sawalha
Wad Rayyes.....Oscar James
Bint Majzoub......Ellen Thomas
Jean Morris......Donnla Hughes
Isabella Seymour...Carolyn Pickles

with Mitchell Zhangazha, Jonathan Tafler, Chris Pavlo,
Inam Mirza, Jill Cardo, and Dan Starkey

Produced and directed by Jonquil Panting.


Notes from BBC:
The most celebrated Arabic novel of the twentieth century is a sensual and shocking thriller from Sudan. Its fluid structure and elusive tone have defied many attempts to dramatise it in different media, but make it uniquely suited for radio. This dramatisation, the only one completed during Salih's lifetime, was made for BBC Radio 3 last year.

Not even the work of the recent Nobel Prize Winner, Egyptian Naguib Mahfouz, has achieved the literary status of SEASON OF MIGRATION TO THE NORTH by Sudanese-bornTayeb Salih. First published in Arabic in 1966, this short novel's translation into English in 1969 triggered a series of translations into all major languages, from Norwegian to Japanese, and a cult following. In 1989, it became the first Arabic novel to be published in the Penguin Classics series, and in 2001 was selected by a panel of Arab writers and critics as the most important Arab novel of the twentieth century. Its intelligent and richly poetic engagement with the ambivalences of the colonial legacy have made it a book which now features on University syllabuses around the world, and about which doctorates are written. Conversely it is still regularly banned and unbanned in states throughout the Arab world, and is currently banned in the place where it is so memorably set, the tiny rural villages of remote northern Sudan.

A young man returns to his beloved home 'on the bend of the Nile' after seven years studying in London, where he is proud to have completed a doctorate on the life of a minor English poet. He is comforted to find that the traditional life of the village he loves hasn't changed at all. Except for one man. A mysterious stranger has married into the village and settled down to farm. Then the stranger seeks him out. He has a tale to tell, and only a scholar can hear it. But the telling of the tale will lead them both into two brutally sexual murders, and turn the idyllic world of their village into hell.



THE WRITER: Tayeb Salih was born in the Northern Province of the Sudan in 1929, and studied at the University of Khartoum, before leaving for the University of London. Coming from a background of small farmers and religious teachers, his original intention was to work in agriculture. Except, however, for a brief spell as a schoolmaster before coming to Britain, his working life was in broadcasting, including a spell as Head of Drama for the BBC's Arabic Service. He published four novels and a collection of short stories. His novella "The Wedding of Zein" was made into a drama in Libya, and a Cannes Festival prize-winning film by the Kuwaiti filmmaker Khalid Siddiq in the late 1970s.
For more than 10 years, Salih wrote a weekly column for the London-based Arabic language newspaper, "al Majalla," in which he explored various literary themes. He later became director general of the Ministry of Information in Doha, Qatar. He spent the last 10 years of his working career with UNESCO in Paris, where he held various posts and was finally UNESCO's representative in the Gulf States. Tayeb Salih died in London on 18th February 2009.

Producer Jonquil Panting.

Broadcast on:
BBC Radio 3, 8:00pm Sunday 17th January 2010
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