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TALKING WITH ELMS
Click here to listen to Susie talking to Robert Elms Good ol' Mr Taylor, the ace electrician, called the other day on the mobile. I stopped the car. Are you near home or a radio, he asked, because on his BBC Radio London programme (94.9 fm, 12-3 pm each weekday), Robert Elms is doing a phone-in on creative writing and publishing. I rushed home, phoned in and was lucky enough to be put through to Mr Elms almost immediately. What a nice interviewer he is and he does that rare thing not many interviewers do, he listens to what you have to say. I can fully understand why he is the long-time hero of Mr Taylor, Sid, the courier who delivers our books, and Sara, a canny northern businesswoman (luckily also all Garret Books/Dekaydence supporters), and many, many other listeners. Thank you, Mr Elms.
Click here to listen to Edward Petherbridge Among his many roles, Edward Petherbridge has played Lord Peter Wimsey in screen versions of Dorothy L. Sayers novels. In the 1960s he was a leading member of Laurence Olivier's National Theatre, creating the role of Guildenstern in Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (a production and a performance which reduced Our Author to speechless joy. If she'd been wearing socks, they'd have been knocked off). Mr Petherbridge also gave a touching performance of Newman Noggs in a memorable RSC production of The Life and Times of Nicholas Nickleby (seen also by Our Author and Our Wonderful Graphic Designers). Mr Petherbridge has collaborated with Sir Ian McKellen, and in the US his talents have long been recognised, gaining him a second Tony nomination for his performance on Broadway in O'Neill's Strange Interlude and critical acclaim for Krapp's Last Tape, which he played in New York and in Washington in 1999. Mr Petherbridge is also a gifted poet and artist. And a jolly nice gentleman. TALES FROM THE ASHCROFT THEATRE Review of Susie Cornfield’s talk on writing and publishing at the Fairfield, Croydon Click here for link to This is Croydon Today web page ROSSI RECORDS NEW SONG
Francis Rossi (above, right), co-founder of Status Quo and dubbed The Grand Old Man of Rock ‘n’ Roll, breaks new ground this month - when he goes into the studio to record a new song for a new book which he believes should be a film. “There’s something about this book, Black Light, which keeps drawing me back to it. It’s got great characters, it makes you think, and it’s wicked fun,” said Rossi (at his Surrey home), who’ll be singing lyrics written by the author.
SUSIE ON REM Here's an interview with Susie Cornfield talking about Black Light to Hannah Murray on REM, Spain's largest English Language Radio Network. Click here to listen: Listeners health warning: there's talk that on this day, Susie's voice was off with a load of heavy duty cigar-smoking fairies. STOP PRESS - REVIEW "...Black Light is a wholly innovative teenage thriller. Susie Cornfield’s narrative has a piercing quality which shines with the originality of Alice in Wonderland. Within the confines of racy chapters Susie Cornfield maintains a rich and fascinating narrative. Whilst introducing characters and scenarios at break-neck speed Black Light has the eccentric peculiarity of a modern classic, beguiling you with plot, pace and passion." John Lloyd, Waterstone's Bath
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