menu

From the author’s desk, April 2023

In answer to the often asked enquiry, I am happy to tell you that ‘Joy and Sorrow Unmasked – a story of Bath’, the third novel in The Westcott Chronicles, is progressing well: the first draft, with over sixty chapters and eighty thousand words, continues apace. Its Prologue describes the possible destruction of Chatham Row in 1972, whilst writing this I was  reminded of the prologue in my first book  and what Bathonians faced just over sixty years ago:

PROLOGUE

10.50pm Saturday April 25th 1942

 

Ernst Richter sensed the other nine Luftwaffe planes bank

and turn as he led them between the hills of the Limpley Stoke

valley. Flying in formation two thousand metres above the

meandering River Avon, the squadron of Junkers Ju 88s

followed the silver ribbon sparkling in the moonlight, guiding

them to the centre of Bath – Hitler’s immediate retaliation to

the Royal Air Force bombing Lubeck.

They were the first wave of a hundred and sixty German

bombers from France, loaded with more than three quarters

of a million kilograms of high explosives and incendiaries

destined for the city in the next six hours. The note written

below the two perforated aerial photographs of Bath, torn

from Richter’s target book simply stated: ‘Aim to the south

of the largest crescent shape housing block.’

 

Back to the future, and the objective of meeting the deadline of next Christmas for ‘Joy and Sorrow Unmasked’.

From the author’s desk, March 2023

I am often asked about Kahlil Gibran, the author of ‘The Prophet’ and the source of the titles of each of the novels in the Westcott Chronicles of Bath.

Kahlil was born in 1883 in the impoverished village of Bisharri overlooking the magnificent Qadisha Valley in northern Lebanon. The family were Maronite Christians: his mother Kamila was the daughter of a priest and his father had the reputation for violence – a drinker and gambler.

The boy was educated at a school run by the local priest until he was twelve, at which time Kamila left her husband and emigrated to the United States, where the family, speaking no English, settled in the slums of South End in Boston, Massachusetts.

At the age of thirteen, Gibran became interested in drawing, and was introduced to Fred Holland Day, the eccentric leader of the Boston avant garde, and imitators of the British Decadents and Pre-Raphaelites. Day became the boy’s friend and patron, introducing him to English literature, lending him books and directing him to the new Boston Public Library.

At Day’s exhibition of photographs in 1898, Gibran was introduced to Cambridge poet Josephine Prescott Peabody, some nine years older, and it was she who nicknamed him the Prophet. Within a year Kamila, concerned about the influence of his bohemian friends, took her son back to Lebanon to continue his education at the Maronite high school in Beirut.

At the age of eighteen, Gibran left Beirut to wander around Europe, eventually returning to America in April 1902.

It was at a show in 1904, where he was able to sell some of his pictures, that Gibran met Mary Haskell, who would become his most important and enduring patron. A shrewd businesswoman from a wealthy South Carolina family, she ran a private girl’s school in Boston. With Haskell’s backing he lived and mixed with the famous, devoting most of his time to painting with limited success over the years until 1914.

However, his literary career was blossoming: Al-Funum (‘The Arts’) an Arabic newspaper founded in New York in1913, published dozens of his poems. During the First World War he was associated  with ‘The Seven Arts’, the prominent American literary magazine founded in 1916, but forced to close because of its pacifist leaning, when the USA entered the war in 1917.

The Madman’: His Parables and Poems’, Gibran’s first book in English came out in 1918.

I have spent many enjoyable holidays in Cohasset – the beautiful small coastal town of a little of 8000 people, located 16 miles south of Boston. It was here in 1917 and 1918 that Gibran published al-Mawakib (The Procession) – a two hundred line poem of dialogue between an old man and youth on the edge of a forest: it is a masterpiece of mahjari  poetry, pioneering Arabic Verse. As year later in Cairo came al-Awasif (the Storms), a collection of 31 articles. This was followed by the Forerunner: His Parables and Poems, the harshness of war replaced by softer writing.

Gibran’s masterpiece ‘The Prophet’, was published in 1923: Haskell had referred to it in her journal of 1912. Written in Arabic and translated into English, which Haskell edited, and as with earlier books all the drawings are also by the author. The reviewers were few and rather indifferent, in contrast to the massive public acclaim. The first edition sold out in two months, followed by 1300 every year during the Great Depression, 60,000 in 1944 and 1,00,000 by 1957.

Kahlil Gibran died on 10th April 1931 of cirrhosis of the liver. After a funeral mass in Boston, and in accordance with his wishes, his coffin was returned to Bisharri, his birthplace in Lebanon.

The Third Book: Bath From 1972 onwards – coming soon

JOY AND SORROW – a story of Bath, the third novel in The Westcott Chronicles of Bath, commences in June 1972 – the time of that unforgettable photograph of the naked young girl burnt by napalm fleeing down a road in Vietnam.

The tranquillity of the Lundy family is shattered by a vicious attack on Ruth, now aged five, and gravely disfigured in hospital.

Homelessness, and the Council’s secret and hostile agenda to prevent squatting in Chatham Row, leads to the disused Charmy Down Royal Air Force base north of the city.

The threat to Ian Lundy’s property empire becomes critical when the Government freezes every rent payable in the United Kingdom in November 1972.

The years roll on, and the characters encounter:

…the arrival in the City of a survivor from the war time Polish ghetto and Auschwitz

concentration camp

…a chance meeting at the opening night of the smash musical ‘Jesus Christ

Superstar’

…Ted Heath’s confrontation with the local miners reducing the nation to a three-day

working week

…The I.R.A. bombing of The Corridor in Bath

…Margaret Thatcher becoming the leader of the Conservative Party.

…A deadly meningitis outbreak which closes the Roman Baths for decades.

…The scandal of ‘The Sack of Bath’ hits the national press

… The Brixton race riots.

 

And much much more…

From the Noticeboard

November 2024 From the author’s desk…

12 November, 2024 in From the author's desk

THE JOY OF TRAIN TRAVEL AND PORT TALBOT AT NIGHT 60 YEARS AGO… It seemed a dream. Yesterday was just another day in the filing room, and now, he was…

October 2024 From the author’s desk…

3 October, 2024 in From the author's desk

TRUTH IN THE BISCUIT TIN… “Peek Frean, makers of famous biscuits” said the faded red label on the lid. The tin had rusted in the corners where the label had…

Reviews

‘A masterly weaving of ambition and growing conscious both personally and publicly.’

Anna Jacka-Thomas

“A young man buffeted by world events is left reeling, but survives to build his own empire in Bath. The ancient city has seen it all and has her own cards to play...  Douglas Westcott writes from experience of the chaos of history, business, and wild passions in this gripping trilogy.”

Tom Craigmyle

“Westcott burnishes his well won reputation as the  Grand Master of intrigue with this much anticipated sequel to acclaimed Go Swift and Far ; nothing less than brilliant as with the deft hand of an ancient god  he manoeuvres  the fate of the great and  less than good of Bath across the chess board of life. Check mate; but who wins …..”

Patrick McCloy

“A compelling story of the ups and downs of a Bath property developer. A great evocation of time and place, providing a fascinating history of beautiful Bath Can’t wait for the next instalment.”

Dr Tim Bamford

Website by Bookswarm
0
    0
    Your Basket
    Your basket is emptyReturn to Shop