Backlisted - All the Devils Are Here by David Seabrook

Episode Date: April 17, 2016

Rachel Cooke, Observer writer, New Statesman TV critic and author joins John, Andy & Mathew to discuss 'All the Devils Are Here', the astounding travelogue through Kent and the depths of human behavio...ur from David Seabrook. Plus, the drinking habits of Carry On stars, and what to read in Iceland.Timings: (may differ due to adverts)3'36 - Dalva by Jim Harrison8'46 - Life and Death of Harriett Frean by May Sinclair17'55 - All the Devils Are Here by David Seabrook* To purchase any of the books mentioned in this episode please visit our bookshop at uk.bookshop.org/shop/backlisted where all profits help to sustain this podcast and UK independent bookshops.* For information about everything mentioned in this episode visit www.backlisted.fm*If you'd like to support the show, listen without adverts, receive the show early and with extra bonus fortnightly episodes, become a Patreon at www.patreon.com/backlisted Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 When you're working out at Planet Fitness, it's a judgment-free zone, so you can really step up your workout. That's why we've got treadmills. And our team members are here to help, so you can be carefree with the free weights. There are also balance balls, bikes, cables, kettlebells, and TRX equipment. But, like, no pressure. Get started for $1 enrollment, and then only $15 a month. Hurry this $1 enrollment sale at Planet Fitness end July 18th. $49 annual fee applies. See
Starting point is 00:00:25 Home Club for details. Discover more value than ever at Loblaws. Like Fresh Promise. Produce is carefully selected and checked for freshness. And if it's not fresh, it's free. Yes, you heard that right. From the crispest lettuce
Starting point is 00:00:44 to the juiciest apples, Loblaws is committed to fresh, so you get the best fruits and veggies. Look for new value programs when you shop at Loblaws in-store and online. Conditions may apply. See in-store for details. What should I eat? You should definitely eat puffin while you're there. I've got a taxidermy puffin that I took delivery of about three weeks ago and it's the best thing ever. They're a bit salty but apparently they're delicious. No, don't ignore what Rachel just said.
Starting point is 00:01:28 I swear. Where did you source... It's Edwardian. OK. Where did you source your puffin? I got it from a shop called Hunter and Rose, which sells lots of taxidermy, which I'm obsessed with. But I'd always wanted a puffin, you know, because of the puffin books.
Starting point is 00:01:45 But they're so little. Were you all in the puffin club? Yes. Oh, yes. Totally. Totally, I was. I've got all my back issues in a plastic folder. Do you remember you got a plastic folder?
Starting point is 00:01:55 Brilliant. It was just the first time I attended a happening at the ICA, which was something I was to do, obviously, often in later life. But the first time was for the Puffin... It was called the Puffin Jamboree. Oh, wow. I queued up for Bernard Cribbins' autograph at the ICA. I seem to remember. And Quentin Blake's.
Starting point is 00:02:14 First and last appearance at the ICA. Yeah. The first author event I ever went to was Michael Bond, to bookshop in Tome. I thought this was the most amazing thing. I never thought you could meet authors. It was really exciting. Is your puffin kind of vertical or is it in an action shot?
Starting point is 00:02:32 It's vertical and it's in a glass dome and it's absolutely brilliant. I'll take a picture of it when I get home and I'll tweet it and then you can all look at it. Are they sought after stuffed Edwardian puffins? It was quite expensive, yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:48 But it was one of those things where I felt I had a momentary sickness when I realised how much I was going to have to pay, but then I thought, fuck it. And I was really happy when it arrived. And it's so cool. But I'm really nervous about it. So when people come round, they come in and they go,
Starting point is 00:03:04 oh, oh, a puffin! And they run towards it, and then I'm just like, it so when people come round they come in and they go oh a puffin and they run towards it and then I'm just like step away from the puffin because I don't want anything to happen to it it's not in a glass dome it's in a glass dome but it's slippy slidey the dome on the base but they are supposed to be quite tasty but they
Starting point is 00:03:19 used to on St Kilda they'd catch them and they'd flatten them and they'd put them in a salted barrel it's Gannet's they do that with Unkeeled they do, they'd catch them and they'd flatten them and they'd put them in a salted barrel. It's gannets they do that with on Kilda. They still do it on Lewis, don't they? For kids, if you were a kid, a special birthday treat on St Kilda was to get a puffin in your porridge,
Starting point is 00:03:39 which you can imagine would be delicious, flattened, salty, greasy, fishy tasting puffin. That's a memoir. Yeah. Puffin in the porridge, isn't it? Yeah. Hello and welcome to Backlisted, the podcast that gives new life to old books. As usual, we're gathered round the kitchen table in the luxurious offices of our sponsors, Unbound,
Starting point is 00:03:58 the website that brings authors and readers together to make fabulous books. I'm John Mitchinson, publisher at Unbound. And I'm Andy Miller, author of The Year of Reading Dangerously. And with us, as usual, is author and hip priest, Matthew Clayton. Hello, Matthew. Hello, Andy. Thanks for that. And joining us today is journalist, critic and author, Rachel Cook, her most recent book, her brilliant career, Ten Women of the Fifties, was published in 2013. And we're here today to talk about David Seabrook's All the Devils Are Here.
Starting point is 00:04:30 Hello, Rachel. Hello. But John, what have I been reading? The sad news this week of the death of Jim Harrison, the American writer. I hadn't read a Jim Harrison novel for a long time, which made me sad because he's one of those writers that you dip into and dip out of, and he's amazingly prolific. I think 21 novels, something like 18 volumes of poetry. He's also a foodie, writes really well about food, great friend of Anthony Bourdain. But he's best known, I suppose, for his fiction, which is often compared to Hemingway. One of the things I wanted
Starting point is 00:05:06 to read or reread, which was one of his novels, sort of first period of his novels, a book called Dalva, which I think was first published in 1988. And the reason I want to do it is it's the most un-Hemingway-like of his novels. He looks, he lost his eye in childhood. His head looks like a classic American, hard drinking, hard living, living out in Montana, fly fishing before breakfast, walking his dogs, drinking massively. I read that he, amongst his achievements in his life,
Starting point is 00:05:37 was that he had successfully eaten a 37-course meal. Yeah, whatever, bring it on. I love food, I can eat. He was really loved in America and really loved in France. He's loved in France, right? But he's barely published here. He was published by Second Warburg for a long
Starting point is 00:05:54 time. His great publisher in the States is Morgan Entrican of Grove Atlantic who wrote a very good obituary this week. But I don't think we really produce writers like Harrison in the UK. I mean, Thomas McGuane is another one. I mean he writes about nature and it's very easy to reach for Hemingway.
Starting point is 00:06:11 He rather wonderfully once wrote about Hemingway that Hemingway was a wood stove that didn't give out much heat which I sort of feel is true whereas Harrison, he's sort of a deeply admirable novelist. At Dalva the book that I've been rereading, is about a 45-year-old part Sioux woman who has got to a stage in life where she wants to go back to the place where she grew up and to find her son.
Starting point is 00:06:36 Her son was taken from her when she was young. And also the son's father. And the way it's structured is it's in her voice. And she's a fantastically centered strong independent woman she's never been seduced by anybody she insofar as there's ever been relationships in her life she's done the seducing the middle section of the book is then an alcoholic professor called michael a rather kind of creepy unpleasant sort of narrative about his obsession with the young waitress and he's writing about Dalva's
Starting point is 00:07:05 great-grandfather who was a Civil War hero and also one of the great historians. He was on the sort of side of the Sioux in the Battle of Little Bighorn. So it's American history, it's wilderness, it's family drama and he kind of navigates that. His prose
Starting point is 00:07:22 is never flashy. I think he's just a great storyteller. All the things that you would want from a novel, it's sort of here. I've never read him but when you talk about him, I remember seeing his books stacked up in compendium in Camden. And I remember when I worked for
Starting point is 00:07:38 Waterstones in the early 90s, we used to import them. They were staples along with the Bukowskis. And every year there'd be a new Jim Harrison novel and nobody would read it except for those people who love this kind of American fiction. I mean, he's got this great environmental, ecological thing
Starting point is 00:07:54 going as well. So Gary Snyder, the poet, is also another writer he kind of gets compared to. Jim Harrison didn't much like academia and he was constantly turning down lucrative offers to teach creative writing and when he was asked once why he kept turning them down
Starting point is 00:08:10 Somebody's got to stay outside Brilliant, I love that but also again, just because it's amusing to me, I couldn't find it but Dalva was made into a TV movie starring Farrah Fawcett Farrah Fawcett.
Starting point is 00:08:25 Was it? Farrah Fawcett. Farrah Fawcett Majors, as we used to know back in the day. But as Dalva, which sounds like a total car crash, but it's really good, life-affirming, proper grown-up fiction, which is why I think he's so popular in France. Do you know a French magazine, a famous French magazine, called Les Unroquips Tibler?
Starting point is 00:08:44 No. There's no equivalent magazine of it in the UK. It's fantastic. Like Apostrophe, the TV show that everybody would go on. Oh, we have Apostrophe. But it's a really brilliant equal split between music and film and books. And there were always big profiles of Jim Harrison in Les Unroquips.
Starting point is 00:09:03 Well, I suspect also it probably translates really well because the language is definitely non-flash. He writes beautifully about nature, but he doesn't write in a kind of fancy-pants way. Well, I've never read anything by him. Matthew, have you read anything by Jim Harrison? I've never heard of him before. Rachel, have you read anything by Jim Harrison?
Starting point is 00:09:19 No, not exactly my sort of thing. Not up your street, no. A man who eats 37 courses. Well, that I'm more in favour of. Actually, his food writing is good. He's a bit of a gourmand. Somebody said he was writing Dalvin with one hand, killing rattlesnakes with his other.
Starting point is 00:09:39 That's what I've been reading. Andy, what have you been reading? I've been reading... OK, so very... I read a novel... Elizabeth Taylor? Yes, I did read something by Elizabeth Taylor because I'm always reading something by Elizabeth Taylor, as you know. I also read Life and Death of Harriet Freen by May
Starting point is 00:09:56 Sinclair. Have you ever read that? No, I haven't, but I've heard it's depressing, that's all right. Yeah, I mentioned it when I was in the office last week and one of your colleagues said, that is the most depressing book ever written. And indeed, it's very bleak. But it was really, really good. May Sinclair invented, was very well known in her lifetime.
Starting point is 00:10:15 This book was published in 1919 and it's the story of a woman's life from birth to death. It's very short. You could read it in a couple of hours. But May Sinclair invented the term stream of consciousness. Oh, Lord. And so he's one of these people who, in her day... Mace Sinclair.
Starting point is 00:10:34 And in her day was considered an important writer, an avant-garde writer, almost entirely forgotten. And the unmistakable green livery of old school. There's nothing so cheering about livery. No, I agree, I agree. And I miss it still. I bought this in a pile of BMCs, Fargo Modern Classics,
Starting point is 00:10:53 from Oxfam in Canterbury about a month ago. And clearly some feminist had either died or repented and got rid of everything to Oxfam. But I came back with this and, as it happens, ate Elizabeth Taylor. Talking of Oxfam and people returning things, there was the single most successful tweet, the QI account, this week. You perhaps saw it.
Starting point is 00:11:19 It's got thousands and thousands of retweets. It was at Folkestone, I think it was. Folkestone, second-hand bookshop. So many returned copies of Fifty Shades of Grey that they actually built a fort in the shop and they photographed it. They, quote, begged customers not to hand in copies. We've done everything we can to cope with it.
Starting point is 00:11:38 But the picture is proper. It's not a small fort. Have any of you read Fifty Shades of Grey? I've read the first 20 pages. I have not read any of Fifty Shades of Grey. I ran out of steam. Have you? Well, I had to interview Erica James, is it? E.L. James, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:55 I had to interview her, so I'm very conscientious, so I knuckled down, as it were, to read it. And even the Protestant that I am, I just couldn't get through it. It's quite astonishingly bad. It's not sort of this is fun bad, it's sort of
Starting point is 00:12:15 help me bad. It's fan fiction. It's as well written as a lot of fan fiction is, and yet mysteriously, as is the way... Well, let's choose to accentuate the positive. That's what makes publishing so interesting, because the public decide what they want to read.
Starting point is 00:12:32 And I love the madness of five million people in the UK. There's that strange thing, isn't there, about erotica publishing, which is actually it's all about BDSM. They've all got that element, they've all got an S&O element in it. Those are the books that people like reading when Black Lace launched whenever it was 20 years ago that Virgin launched it. They closed Black Lace down the year before
Starting point is 00:12:54 Fifty Shades came out. Did they? It's very weird. It's weird that that work in literature why is that particular kinkiness people like? I didn't know what fan fiction was and i was at the hairdresser and my hairdresser said she said everyone in the salon is reading 50 shades of grey and i said oh you know and she said it's you know it's fan fiction and i said well what is that
Starting point is 00:13:16 and she said well like any character from anything has sex with another character from anything and i couldn't quite understand what she meant and said, she went on this website on her phone. My hair was all, like, in foil. So we had plenty of time. And she said, like, OK, here's a character from EastEnders, and he's going to... What's a character from literature that you like? And I just said, you know, some random figure from, you know,
Starting point is 00:13:40 like The Hobbit or something. And sure enough, you know, there's one of the Mitchell brothers frantically having it off with, you know like the hobbit or something and sure enough you know there's one of the mitchell brothers frantically having it off with you know some wizard or something i mean it's just bizarre it's quite bizarre i met someone once her thing was that she wrote so erotic fan fiction and it was vikings and navy seals so i can't remember whether it was the navy seals that went back in time to shag the vikings or the vikings but it was like it whether it was the Navy SEALs that went back in time to shag the Vikings or the Vikings, but it was quite particular. Do you know where fanfic starts?
Starting point is 00:14:13 Do you know the programme which birthed it? No. Of course it's Star Trek. Yeah. And specifically it was Kirk and Spock. I've read unconvincing arguments that the whole of literature, you know, the kind of, you know, the anxiety of influence, Harold Bloomian vision,
Starting point is 00:14:31 is that all fiction is fan fiction to an extent. You know, there was an article that appeared online about last month which said, what is Jean Rees' wide sargasso sea if not fan fiction? Well, there's a kind of a... Well, that's certainly true in that case. Operating at a very high level, clearly. They just overstate their claim, as does, I would suggest, Harold Bloom in Anxiety of Influence,
Starting point is 00:14:55 but that's a... So, also, I'm going to talk about this anyway, briefly. So I'm going to Iceland next week. Iceland! I've never been to Iceland. We're all going together. It's going to be very... My family, not you. I was going to say, no-one? I've never been to Iceland. We're all going together. It's going to be very... My family, not you. I was going to say, no one told me that was part of it.
Starting point is 00:15:10 Anyway, it's going to be... I was outside. So I put a thing up on Twitter two days ago saying, I'm going to Iceland next week. I'm very excited. Can anybody recommend me a great Icelandic book? Several people recommended the same books. So several
Starting point is 00:15:26 people recommended Burial Rites by Hannah Kent. Several people recommended Independent People by Haldor Laxness. And indeed, or Fish Can Sing, which your lovely wife, Rachel Kerr, recommended over Independent People. So I've started reading Fish Can Sing. Somebody here recommended Letters From Iceland by W.H. Auden and Louis MacNeice. Names For The Sea by Sarah Moss. Oh, I read that. Names For The Sea, it's not called that, but there is a very good Sarah Moss...
Starting point is 00:15:56 Her first novel is set in Iceland. Well, this is a non-fiction book about her moving to Iceland. Well, her first novel is about a group of archaeologists who are digging up some ancient site, and it all gets very terrifying, and it's rather gripping. Yeah, it's rather gripping. And also, I was recommended a very short book called The Blue Fox by Sion,
Starting point is 00:16:20 which, John, I think you would love. Sounds great. Which is a book about... It's set in the 19th century and it starts with an unnamed man hunting a fox. It then goes back to explain who the unnamed man is. The unnamed man, as he shoots at the fox, causes an avalanche
Starting point is 00:16:39 and once the snows have buried him, extremely strange, gothic and psychedelic things start to happen with swapping of identities and such like. It was terrific. The reason why I mention that is I put that tweet out about three o'clock. By half past three I was
Starting point is 00:16:58 reading the book and by half past five I finished it. Who says the 21st century? Well no, it's wonderful. You know, ten years ago, that whole process, it would still only take you two hours to read the book, but it would take you two weeks to get the recommendation, find it. We don't have it, but we can order it for you. I've never been, I've always wanted to go,
Starting point is 00:17:19 and I love also the Orton McNeice, which is one of my great... I mean, go back to the... The other one is Burne-Jones and William Morris. Oh, yeah, I've got that here. It has this weird sort of position in our imagination. It's sort of strangely... It's kind of not really part of our culture, but it kind of is. I mean, you go...
Starting point is 00:17:40 Most of Ireland and Scotland are genetically Vikings anyway. But the thing, other than their strange belief in fairies which they seem to really genuinely do if you get up north they really do believe the other thing is that the Icelandic phone directory is organised by first name because basically everybody has to and I wrote what's great
Starting point is 00:18:04 surnames are son of... And daughter and son. Yeah, so... So we're going into the interior, we're going whale-watching, and we're going to the Witchcraft Museum and the Hot Springs, and we're going to the Phallological Museum.
Starting point is 00:18:21 I was going to say, the Phallological Museum has got the largest preserved blue whale penis, I think, which is the largest one in the world. The gift shop is incredible. I was going to say, we're almost teetering on the edge. Would you like me to bring you back a badge or a rubber? Which would you prefer? It's always been top of my list on where to visit
Starting point is 00:18:41 if I found myself in Reykjavik. So that covers the water and of course the shark the shark the buried shark disgustingness we'll pick this up again after some adverts stay tuned to this summer's here and you can now get almost anything you need for your sunny days delivered with uber eats what do we mean by almost well you can't get a well groomed lawn delivered but you can get a chicken parmesan delivered. A cabana? That's a no. But a banana? That's a yes.
Starting point is 00:19:08 A nice tan? Sorry, nope. But a box fan? Happily, yes. A day of sunshine? No. A box of fine wines? Yes. Uber Eats can definitely get you that. Get almost, almost anything delivered with Uber Eats. Order now. Alcohol and select markets.
Starting point is 00:19:22 Product availability may vary by Regency app for details. Wherever you're going, you better believe American Express will be right there with you. Heading for adventure? We'll help you breeze through security. Meeting friends a world away? You can use your travel credit. Squeezing every drop out of the last day? How about a 4 p.m. late checkout? Just need a nice place to settle in? Enjoy your room upgrade. Wherever you go, we'll go together. That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Starting point is 00:19:51 Visit amex.ca slash yamx. Benefits vary by card. Terms apply. Well, we should probably move on to the subject of our podcast, the actual subject of our podcast, which is All the Devils Are Here by David Seabrook. Should we start by asking Rachel to say why you chose this remarkable book for the podcast, other than the fact that it is remarkable?
Starting point is 00:20:11 Well, the thing about it is people always say that there's no book like this, and it's just never true. But in this case, I really think there isn't another book like it. I certainly can't think of one. And to me, it's a kind of minor masterpiece that no one knows about, and I would like people to read it. When did you first read it? Can you remember? Well, there's something spooky about this book, which we will talk about,
Starting point is 00:20:35 but for me personally, it's been quite spooky. When it came out in 2002, I read a review of it, and the review made a great impression on me. But it was one of those things where I, it was only an impression, I couldn't remember the name of the book or the author. And I kept googling and I must be a really crap googler, because I type in like, you know, Kent, murderers, weird things, you know, and this book would never come up. And it was driving me mad. And this went on for years.
Starting point is 00:21:11 And then in 2011, so... Yeah, quite a long time after it was published. Yes, nine years later, massive name drop coming up. I was at a dinner to celebrate Claire Tomlin's Dickens biography, which was appropriate because Dickens is in this book, as we all discuss. And I was sitting next to Claire's publisher, who was then Tony Lacey from Viking.
Starting point is 00:21:34 And he was doing that old school publishing thing of slightly boasting about his second home. Someone did that to me last week. Very old school. Them were days. He divides his time. He divides his time between Someone did that to me last week. Very old school. Them were days. Yeah, them were the days. He divides his time between Chiswick and Deal.
Starting point is 00:21:53 I always think when that says that on a jacket, I always think tosser, but anyway. And he was talking about Deal, and I said, gosh, Deal, you know, and I said, you must read Roger Lewis's book about Charles Hortry, The Man Who Was Private Whittle. It's brilliant. And he said, yes, I, you know. And I said, you must read Roger Lewis's book about Charles Hortory, The Man Who Was Private Whittle. It's brilliant. And he said, yes, I've heard it's very good. That's a great book. Yeah, he said, I've heard it's very good,
Starting point is 00:22:10 but I'm actually reading a really good book about Thanet and the coast. Can I just interrupt you? I recommended that book to Tony Mason. Did you? Yeah. Well done, Andy. The interconnectedness of all things. Well, anyway, and he he said I'm reading this book
Starting point is 00:22:25 it's called All the Devils Are Here and as he said it I became you know I had this goose bump thing of thinking this is the book I've been looking for nine years I've been trying to find out what this book is and here it is so I went home I went on to A Books I bought it
Starting point is 00:22:40 and I suppose all of us in our lives, you do occasionally have that feeling where a book comes to you and you feel like it might have been written almost for you. It maybe happens maybe two or three times. Now, it says something very weird about me that I felt bad about this book. But I did.
Starting point is 00:23:02 This is I'm going to read the blur in a minute. You can make up your own mind. I'll just briefly say why. I have a very powerful feeling about faded seaside towns. As a kid, my granny used to take me to Bridlington and Withernsea. No one's heard of Withernsea. And even once we had a week at Pontins in Morecambe. And I had very intense experiences in these places, which I perhaps won't describe here.
Starting point is 00:23:28 So I love those depressing seaside towns. To me, a weekend in Eastbourne is like the best thing that you can do, really, and going around charity shops. But also, a lot of the people in this book are people, it sounds so weird to say this, but from my childhood. So, for instance, Richard Dadd, the first painting that I ever knew was the Fairy Fellows Masterstroke because I had a big postcard of it in my bedroom. I don't know where it came from. Also, Dickens was our household god. My dad and my granny were that thing that might not exist now, which is
Starting point is 00:24:06 working class fans of Dickens. And they didn't really think that any other novels were worth reading. My granny was blind, so she'd only ever listened to them. But they'd read Dickens. What you did was you read Dickens, and when you finished, you started again. And in our hall, there was a big picture of Dickens my dad just worshipped Dickens my sister was called Florence for Florence Dombey so so there was Dickens and Richard Dad and Seaside Towns and I just had this feeling of awful kind of recognition and to me a lot of books people say this is an interesting book, and then you start to read it, and actually there are interesting bits, but there are loads of longers.
Starting point is 00:24:49 This book, there's something interesting on every page, in every paragraph. I'm going to read the blurb in a minute, because I think it's important that we tell people what the book is about, to the extent that one can do that. But one of the things that's brilliant about this book... The Sound of Young Victoria I felt re-reading I felt re-reading it was that Seabrook
Starting point is 00:25:11 stays on the subject as long as he's interested in it and then bolts to the next one. And it layers and layers and layers as it goes on. Which actually is a really high risk strategy because you would think it would be left with a feeling of superficiality, but actually I don't feel that at all.
Starting point is 00:25:31 It's a short book. So let me just read the blurb because we can assume that lots of people listening may not have heard this book. I think almost no one. Well, here, this is what... I know for a fact that this blurb was written by... We should say it is available on Kindle. It's available on Kindle at the moment, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:49 I'd very much love to see it available again. Come on, Grant, do the right thing. Anyway, let me... Oh! This blurb was probably written by David Seabrook's editor, Neil Belton. The great Neil Belton. The great Neil Belton, who is an author in his own right, of course.
Starting point is 00:26:07 So just let me read the blurb here. In his first book, David Seabrook takes us on a deranged exploration of the Kentish coastal towns of Thanet and Medway. He fuses his observation of these depression landscapes, city centres full of unemployed young men and asylum seekers and dodgy characters, with literary and historical associations that seem, through his eyes, more like bad dreams than heritage advertisements for the local tourist board. He sees the desperate jollity of Margate, where T.S. Eliot stayed after the Great War,
Starting point is 00:26:37 as a key element in the making of The Wasteland. He sees the desperate jollity of Margate, where T.S. Eliot stayed after the Great War, as a key element in the making of The Wasteland. His Rochester and Chatham crawl with the ghosts of Dickens and the parricide Richard Dadd. In Broadstairs, site of John Buchan's The Thirty-Nine Steps, he uncovers a weird network involving Lord Curzon, Buchan, William Joyce and Audrey Hepburn's father In Deal he stumbles on the true sordid story that lay behind The Servant Robin Morm's novel later turned into a film by Joseph Losey
Starting point is 00:27:11 and links it to the milieu of not-so-gentle gay retirees to the coast a network that touches on the murder of the Box of Freddie Mills and the self-destruction of the carry-on actor Charles Hortry Written with high energy and seriousness disturbingly personal and surprising this is a unique book Now, I hope that makes everybody pause the podcast and go and download a copy of this book. It's absolutely wonderful. I'm just going to say to Rachel that the circumstances under which I read this book are slightly different. I remember reading a couple of reviews of it, as you did,
Starting point is 00:27:49 and thinking, oh, that sounds interesting, but not doing anything about it. And then my family moved in 2005 to the East Kent coastal town of Whitstable, where we still live. And I walked into the Remainder Bookshop, the excellent Harbour Books, Hello Harbour Books, if you're listening, and there was a pile of copies of All the Devils Are Here, reduced in price, with a sign next to them saying, Local Interest.
Starting point is 00:28:21 Which is such a turn-off. Local Interest is my worst word. And especially when you know what the book is about and how steamy and feverish it is right so I picked it up and read it on the train journey into London and the train journey back and I remember
Starting point is 00:28:39 putting it down at the end and we'll have to say something about the ending of the book thinking what did I just read it down at the end and we'll have to say something about the ending of the book, thinking what did I just read? What was that book? And I found that it really stayed in my head for the next few weeks
Starting point is 00:28:54 so I read it again and then thought wow, this is the energy of it. I'm definitely going to read it again. I finished it this morning, in fact early this afternoon. It is just it is so generous I think there are things that we, obviously that you can say that it's like
Starting point is 00:29:09 there are connections perhaps to Ian Sinclair's work, it reminds me in some ways of W.G. Sebald's The Rings of Saturn journey through Suffolk on foot, but it's in its kind of mixture it's strange as you were saying before Andy the way it's
Starting point is 00:29:26 it doesn't make any attempt to be coherent in the way that that most books do the thesis if there is one he never really reveals what it is it's a it seems to me I've never I've never quite had the kind of hair stand up on the back of my neck in the same way it's it's like demonic possession it's like he's exploring demonic possession without ever saying that's what he's doing well also it is a bit like house of cards when kevin spacey turns and says something so he's he's going along it's quite sort of scholarly and factual and you're thinking oh yes this person murdered this person this person had sex with this person. And then all of a sudden he goes, and he tells you something about himself. It's oblique. It's not clear. You don't know that much about him.
Starting point is 00:30:11 And then you have this chilling feeling. You feel, I think, frightened of him and frightened for him. Yes, absolutely. And you think, what's he going to do? Is he mad? Is he sick? Is he a pervert? And of course by the time I read this book, David Seabrook was already dead. He died young, as they say. And so to have this feeling
Starting point is 00:30:34 of being afraid of him and afraid for him, it was a very unnerving thing. It reminded me very much of when you're reading as a child. When I was a kid, i was mad on those books by peter haining that the pan book of vampires and and those books were full of things that you couldn't really understand when you were a kid you knew you liked them but you couldn't understand
Starting point is 00:30:57 them and that's i feel that about this there are lots of things in this book that i understand i understand that richardd killed his father and he was a fantastic painter and he went to a loony bin. I know that. But there are so many things I don't understand about this book. Why are they in here? Why is David Seabrook like this or that? What's happened to him?
Starting point is 00:31:18 Is he gay? Is he straight? What, what, what, what? Why is he drawn to these things? That whole sense of places, the house in Broadstairs that becomes the home to... There's a house called Naldera, which is the scene
Starting point is 00:31:33 of the 39 Steps, which he then brilliantly moves slightly along the coast to a nearby house which is the home of Oswald Mosley. The whole way he kind of connects that story with... Well, no, it's not the house of Oswald Mosley, no. Naldera was the home of Oswald Moseley. The whole way he kind of connects that story with... Well, no, it's not the house of Oswald. No, Naldera was the house of Curzon,
Starting point is 00:31:50 and Curzon's daughter, Cynthia, was married to Oswald Moseley. She was the first Mrs Moseley. And then Naldera then became the home of this man, Arthur Tester, who was a leading light in the British Union of fascists. Yes. And then the story of... That enables the story of Lord Horhor and Audrey Hepburn's dad who turns out to be a fascist as well. And you don't know where he's taking you, but you don't mind him taking you,
Starting point is 00:32:17 even though, as they say, you have a bad feeling about this. I had a really interesting conversation earlier in the week. I rang Neil belton up because there's it was comparatively difficult to find out things about david seabrook so i rang neil up and he told me that the book came to him via david seabrook sending one of the essays in whatever form to ian sinclair And Ian Sinclair, who at that time was published by Neil, passed it on to Neil with no agent involved, saying, I think you should look at this. And that thing, Rachel, that you were saying about Seabrook
Starting point is 00:32:56 being someone you were... ..a narrator you were afraid of and afraid for, this is a thing that Ian Sinclair wrote about David Seabrook. He describes him in a very Sinclairish way as a dull Q de Quincy. And then he goes on to say, refusing to allow the area he inhabits, the banishment, to become a noose, Seabrook has decided to celebrate it with a virtuoso exhibition of Sardony. His franchise, the area he describes raiding and returning,
Starting point is 00:33:32 is anywhere that can be reached in an hour or so by bus or train from Canterbury. It's true, isn't it? He gives his readers an ear-bashing they won't forget. And when Seabrook died earlier this year it was a horribly premature loss now this mysterious author is fated to become part of the zone he described to such effect an anecdote a rumor a legend yeah that's brilliant but but a process which Seabrook is is complicit in I mean you, he's absolutely right about the fact that he doesn't want to move far from Canterbury
Starting point is 00:34:07 because in the book he'll be talking to someone really fascinating and he says, well, my bus is due in a minute, I've got to go. That's funny. And you think, no, don't go now. It's funny because he doesn't quite do it. It doesn't really lay on kind of the humour or the irony, although there's a great letter at one point where somebody writes to him and says,
Starting point is 00:34:23 your book of essays on Kent and its history should make interesting reading oh yes I was going to read just so yes I'm writing a book of essays on Kent and its history which is true but so not what yes he goes yes absolutely he goes to Gillingham that's the daughter of Lord Hawthorne who says that which is which is a great interview Rachel do you do you want to read the first page? I mean, the book's divided into four. So there are three chapters. The first chapter is Rochester and Chatham. The second chapter is North Fall and Broadstairs.
Starting point is 00:34:56 And the third chapter is... What is it? Oh, it's Deal, of course it is. But there's what he calls a prelude, which is Margate. And it's about T.S. Eliot's nervous breakdown and he goes to Margate to write and I don't think I realized this at the time but it's really obvious to me now why Seabrook used that as his prelude because I think this book is his nervous breakdown yeah and these sort of fugitive voices, bits of poem and Bible and half echoes, half rhymes, it's all kind of from the wasteland. I think the main thing, though, is that feeling of
Starting point is 00:35:33 madness and being on the edge of... So this is him in Margate. There are hunched, sedated souls lingering in cafes and souped-up milk bars. There are groups of squabbling Albanians outside. There are the young men of the front, this front, all bare arms, body art and fuss-working, furious faces, faces that ought to be spouting water from the walls of Gothic buildings. But they're here and they speak, spraying spittle. I drift past the entrance to Dreamland, Margate's main attraction opened its
Starting point is 00:36:06 doors in 1920, importing the name from an amusement park on Coney Island and the main ride, the Caterpillar, from Germany. While you queued for the big thrill, you could look up at your kids looking down at you through a grill set in the huge horned head of the snail man, a tall wooden structure with stairs. The park was also the place to get your pocket picked, and probably still is. I mean, it gives you a flavour of it, although you can't quite do it justice unless you just devour the whole thing, I think.
Starting point is 00:36:37 You know, you were saying this isn't a book like... You know, you mistrust this isn't a book like any other. Yeah. I mistrust that you will want to read it in a sitting and then turn straight back to page one and start it again. Yeah. That's a thing, isn't it, that people say? But this book, I feel...
Starting point is 00:36:55 Maybe you wouldn't want to go straight back. Maybe you want to open the window and take a deep breath or two. But the benefit of reading it straight through in one go, which you could do, I think you could do in three hours if you put your mind to it the kind of accumulation of images and the feverishness of it. And I mean each of the chapters
Starting point is 00:37:14 has a distinct mood so the chapter about Richard Dadd and Charles Dickens I mean that's the most sort of scholarly and straightforward then it kind of ratchets up so he goes to investigate his fascists
Starting point is 00:37:32 and there's this bloke who is he is the bloke following him he's dressed as a vicar what's going on yeah I mean it's terrifying it's like something out of The Prisoner and he's going down the steps yes that's exactly it definitely has fit Prisoner I also felt's going down the steps. Yes, that's exactly... It definitely has prisoner. I also felt that the only person I could imagine who could film this book, and it is unfilmable, is Nick Rogue.
Starting point is 00:37:52 It has that same sort of strange... Yeah, that's very good. Certainly, if we come to the ending, the ending has a real sort of Nick Rogue feeling to it, the pink duffel coat and the... Oh, the pink duffel coat. Oh, yeah. That takes place in Deal.
Starting point is 00:38:05 We have a little clip here of the section in Deal that deals partly with the late Charles Hortry, the carry-on actor, who, as you said, Roger Lewis's book, lovingly paints a horrible portrait of... Could you... Matt, could we just hear... Oh, I believe it's a driver uh describing his dealings with Charles Hawtree in the period we're talking about sometimes um we used to get um a call from his
Starting point is 00:38:34 house and he'd give us a little list saying what drinks he'd like delivered there it was normally uh bottles of sherry or gin sometimes some mixers So I got the impression it wasn't just for him, but maybe he was having people down as well. But I don't remember ever having actually picked anyone else up from his house apart from himself. And that's from a BBC documentary about the lives of carry-on stars and specifically how unhappy they all were, which is a must-watch. I love this line from the book about Hawkshires.
Starting point is 00:39:06 It said, Reeling round like an old wasted weasel Turfed out of Toad Hall He performed at the drop of a hip flask For any tabloid hack who happened to be passing through They used me and dumped me Shat all over me I could have been as famous as Sid James
Starting point is 00:39:20 He does that sort of Seyboldian thing of putting black and white photos through the book, which add to the oddness of it. Duncan Fallowell said the book was carry on Margate, rewritten as Dracula, which I thought was quite good. I mean, the final section is just so bizarre because the stories are basically all connected by this chap Gordon who Seabrook goes to talk to.
Starting point is 00:39:50 Who is an old queen. He's a massive old queen who's sort of shagged all these people. And it's like a sort of spider sitting in his web and it takes him out to Robin Worm, to Charles Hawtree. And it's just... And Freddie Mills, the boxer. Freddie Mills, the boxer. Who he's had sex with. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:13 It's just the most extraordinary sort of tangled web. And the way he narrates that is... Because he firstly says, well, a lot of people thought Freddie Mills was gay, but obviously a lot of the people who the Mills kind of historians don't, they discount it altogether. And then he says, you know, well, good for them, and then tells the story of the guy who's
Starting point is 00:40:34 had sex with Freddie Mills, which is a very odd kind of not terribly, you know, he talks, the guy who had sex with him talks about how hard Freddie Mills' body he'd never had sex with anybody like that, but it was a sort of empty encounter. So this is going on, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:40:49 And you're reading this and you're thinking, this is a web of, what is this? And then what happens? And this is how the essay ends and how the book ends. Matthew, what happens at the end of the book? Well, occasionally there are references to his wife or his fiancée in the book, aren't there? She's died.
Starting point is 00:41:04 She's died. She's died. And the book, and so you kind of, there's a little echo of this that comes through occasionally in the book in these little sections that are more personal. And then at the end, why don't you describe what happens, Rachel? Well, he's on his way home from having seen Gordon. They've had a long chat in Gordon's cottage. He's going to get his bus. He's going to get his bus and he
Starting point is 00:41:35 says, you know, it's clear that he's broke. And he says, it's a question of rent. And we all know what rent means in that context. And he says, it's a question of rent. And we all know what rent means in that context. And he goes into the pub and he gets himself a bitter lemon. And he sits down and he waits and some blokes come in. And he gets talking to one of the blokes.
Starting point is 00:42:01 And this bloke tells him a story about how when he was a younger man he liked boys and there was one boy he was particularly fond of and anyway to cut a long story short he thinks that this favorite boy of his was on the beach at deal and when he goes down to see him he's wearing a pink duffel coat and the he pulls back the hood and it's charles hawtry and then you cut back to the pub where seabrook's listening to this and it's obvious that they're going to go off and have sex and seabrook's going to be paid for this or at least that's what he implies and that's how it ends which is it's just a very strange ending isn't it i mean even that little bit about bitter lemon.
Starting point is 00:42:46 So when he goes into the pub, he orders a bitter lemon, but then a few paragraphs later, he's clearly drunk and he talks about being drinking gin. So that's even kind of weird, even the set-up for that particular scene. I think the guy's been giving him gin, hasn't he? He just thinks, well, I'm going to drink it because it's going to make it easier
Starting point is 00:43:04 because he doesn't really have an appetite for what he's about to do. He just wants the cash. But then there were a couple of bits earlier on where he's talking to people about stuff and his first question is, tell me about his cock. They're quite in your face. Forgive the pun.
Starting point is 00:43:20 But suddenly he snaps straight into this very direct question, which again, thinking about the earlier section about dickens or even tsl it's that's they're completely earlier matthew is the ending leads you quite discombobulated i think yeah but also what you say it sort of changes what all ending what great endings do which is make you think what have i just read yeah rethink recalibrate recontextualise what you just read, right? It's a sort of major focus ball, and you suddenly think, hell, I need to go back. There's a section towards the end of the book, isn't there,
Starting point is 00:43:54 the Freddie Mills section, which is also, he kind of elides that into the murders, eight women who were murdered in London in the 60s. I'm going to say a bit about that as well. Jack the Stripper murders because they were all... Well, they were all murdered by being choked to death. They were strangled and stripped. Then he goes on Andy Seabrook's next book, his second book.
Starting point is 00:44:16 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, basically, I'm going to say a little bit about Seabrook based on what I could find out about him and what Neil Belton told me, which was really, really interesting. Basically, Seabrook was born in 1960. This is where he grew up, this area. So he grows up in Kent. He had quite a strict and Christian upbringing.
Starting point is 00:44:36 He studied at the University of Kent. He did an MA in Proust. Neil told me that he was never quite sure what Seabrook did for money a lot of the time but he definitely operated on the edge of legality
Starting point is 00:44:54 and off and over the other side of it that he had at times done stuff he didn't feel too good about which indeed you can seeping through this book, I think. And he told me that David Seabrook would come into the Granter office and monologue about either things that he was fascinated by,
Starting point is 00:45:16 which is very much what this book is like, listening to that person, or ranting at length about how much he hated nearly all other contemporary authors like most authors do his two favourite writers were Gordon Lish as a writer, famous as an editor
Starting point is 00:45:35 he's Raymond Carver's editor a writer of his own right and also the ghost stories of Robert Aikman and Neil Belton said that he had never read nor for that matter heard of Robert Aikman. And Neil Belton said that he had never read, nor for that matter heard of Robert Aikman, that Seabrook lent him these, at that stage, very rare first editions of some of Aikman's books.
Starting point is 00:45:58 And Neil loved them and in turn got them republished by Faber because the Aikman backlist came out a few years ago. David Seabrook did that. Amazing. Isn't that fascinating? That kind of, those little links that you were talking about that you can discern. Well there are definitely ghosts in this book aren't there? And you know it's a
Starting point is 00:46:19 corpse ridden book. Literally and metaphorically. Could we, I just want to listen to something first could we talk a bit about the Richard Dad section Richard Dad is probably best known for killing his dad well he's probably not best known
Starting point is 00:46:36 for that, he's best known for appearing on the Antiques Roadshow so we're going to listen to a clip of a Richard Dad painting being uncovered on the Antiques Roadshow. Well, the first item we saw of really enormous value, I remember, was in Barnstable in 1986. It was very strange the way it turned up.
Starting point is 00:47:00 The couple who owned it didn't know the first thing about it and thought it was valueless. And they weren't even going to bother to come to the show. But the dog needed a walk, and the dog's favourite walk was in the park right by our front door. So as they reached for the dog's lead when leaving home, they said, why don't we take that picture? We don't know anything about it. Just on the off chance.
Starting point is 00:47:20 So they took the picture off the wall and brought it in with Doggie. And the expert that day was Peter Nahum. Now, it is an extraordinary painting. I don't know who this painting is by. I know it's a wonderful painting. I would hope that some indications... I mean, it would be too much to hope, really, that this was a lost painting by Richard Dyer.
Starting point is 00:47:44 Obviously, I've only had a few minutes to look at this, and it needs some investigation. So what I would like to ask you to do is, if we may, take it to London, on your behalf, and investigate it further. Oh, yes, certainly. We'd be interested as well. So, with the owner's permission, we took the picture back to London, took it to the expert and we said, ''Look, is this the long-lost Richard Dad?''
Starting point is 00:48:08 And she said, ''Yes, it certainly is.'' So then we had to go back to the couple in Barnstaple, went to their bungalow with a film crew, and that's when Peter gave them the good news and the valuation. It is an international treasure, a lost picture, and I feel that it could possibly make somewhat over £100,000. Ooh! Hugh Scully, that's proper antiques roadshow, not Fiona Bruce.
Starting point is 00:48:37 The old school. So the painter Richard Dadd, we were talking about this as the most orthodox essay. What does Seabrook do with Richard Dadd in the essay? Well, he first of all tells the story of Dadd's madness and the fact that he murdered his father. And, of course, what happened was that Dadd was taken to an asylum and he spent the rest of his days there
Starting point is 00:49:02 and that's where he painted all of his great masterpieces. But then Seabrook, he starts to think about, you know, what sent Dad mad and Dad went on this extraordinary journey across Europe to Egypt. So Seabrook goes off on this kind of digression about opium, about the Victorian passion for Egypt and then... HE GROWLS
Starting point is 00:49:25 He does one of his strange kind of... That's enough of that. Yeah, and then he posits this extraordinary theory about Edwin Drood, Dickens' final unfinished novel. I mean, I don't know how convincing it is. I'm not a Droodist. Which you sense that Seabrook wasn't terribly keen on, the Droodists. I don't know how convincing it is. I'm not a Druidist. Which you sense that Seabrook wasn't terribly keen on, the Druidists.
Starting point is 00:49:50 But he makes a link, doesn't he? He thinks that Dickens may have had the dad story, may have been somewhere in the mix, and he picks up all these clues. But I think what he does, which is really interesting, is it's almost like he makes dream connections. He's not interested in making causal connections. he lays things that have strange shapes that are similar next to one another and leaves it to the reader to make those kind of connections he's interested in sort of folk memory and things that feel familiar even though they can't possibly be familiar because you've never
Starting point is 00:50:19 been there before or whatever that kind of weird it's all about the uncanny isn't it a lot of it i also think that that essay is important in the structure of the book too because it because it's the most orthodox one it's sort of reassuring i was just gonna say it's a bit of a pat on the back yeah you're going to be interested in this i'm interested in victorian painting yeah what you find out later is i'm just massively in paedophilia and buggery as well. And I can use the skills I demonstrate in the Richard
Starting point is 00:50:52 Dad chapter to link Dad and Drood but don't linger over to more subversive effect as the book goes on. Stick with me. And he's very good about the Dickens industry in Rochester isn't he? And he really takes the mickey out of the sort of Mr Pickwick waddling down the high street and all of that. The heritage.
Starting point is 00:51:12 Yeah. So David Seabrook died in 2009. This was his first book. His second book is called Jack of Jumps. I have a copy, but I hadn't read it until a few weeks ago when I knew we were going to be covering All the Devils Are Here. And as I started reading it, I was thinking, wow, this is great too. And actually, as it goes on,
Starting point is 00:51:31 you can feel Seabrook getting weighed down by it. It's a book about the Jack the Stripper murders. He had been given access to the police files for the first time. But there's a terrible sense of... First of all, he's pretty unpleasant about quite a few of the people talked about in the book and the second thing is there's a weariness about it it's a 350 page book by unfortunately murder number three you can feel him thinking to himself fucking hell
Starting point is 00:52:00 this is murder number three i still got five to go it's a slog unfortunately but when he died he was working on another book about the David Jacobs the 1960s show business lawyer who was Brian Epstein's lawyer who hanged himself in his garage in Hove
Starting point is 00:52:20 in 1968 I mean I think that well yeah and I don't want anyone to read Jack of Jumps because I just think it's pure, distilled misogyny. I mean, I find it almost unreadable. He's so vile about the women. The women were all mostly prostitutes and he's so vile about them
Starting point is 00:52:43 and it becomes intolerable i mean he's very very good at evoking the seedy side of 60s london he's brilliant about you know milk bars and clip joints and all of that but the way he talks about the women is just he he seems to identify with the murderer even though he doesn't know who the murderer is. Andrew Mayle, he agrees with you completely, Rachel. He basically said the thing that's wrong with it is the misanthropy and misogyny have both been allowed to grow wild and go crazy. And I suppose because it's uncoupled...
Starting point is 00:53:17 He says something in All the Devils Are Here right at the beginning about T.S. Eliot, which really struck me, which is the famous line on Margate Sand full stop I'd never noticed the full stop before. I think that's brilliant that bit I think that's really good. I connect nothing with nothing and then he says it's the first and only time that T.S. Eliot transcribed something that was in front of him which is incredibly powerful because this idea of Eliot recovering but in a way
Starting point is 00:53:45 that's what Seabrook does throughout this book he kind of transcribes what's in front of him and he starts whether it's there or not he doesn't ever check anyone's story either does he? Gordon says I had sex with Freddie Mills he doesn't try
Starting point is 00:54:01 he just leaves it there as it were that's what makes this book. And I think it's extraordinary. It's like one of those sort of dark flowerings that English literature throws up, sort of Death's Jest book by Thomas Lovell Beddows, which almost nobody's read, or Confessions, Scottish literature,
Starting point is 00:54:18 Confessions of a Justified Sinner by James Hogg. You know, these are really odd, strange, not get-roundable books. This book, it will haunt me for a long time. The thing about this book I noticed, when I told people that we were doing this book on Backlisted, what you find is that most people haven't heard of it, but the handful of people who have heard of it are passionate about it. So Andrew Mayle, who I mentioned, he really likes it.
Starting point is 00:54:42 about it. So Andrew Mayle, who I mentioned, he really likes it. Jason Haisley, currently Britain's best-selling author because he is the co-author of the Lady Bird parody books. He is obsessed with this book. I was delighted that anybody was giving it some time and space,
Starting point is 00:55:00 which is brilliant. What I would say is that it's a great antidote to a lot of things that are very prevalent in our literary culture. So it's not, I mean, this comes from the time of psychogeography and now we're into the new nature writing. And a lot of those books are so overwritten. This book's the opposite of that. He doesn't try. He doesn't try.
Starting point is 00:55:21 I mean, he's a good writer inherently. He doesn't work it up. And sometimes there are repetitions and cliches and things like that. And that's almost a part of it. Because you get a sense of the author from it. With lots of the new nature writing books, you don't get any sense of the author at all. With this, you get a real sense when you said earlier on andy that the book's about him and it is about all these other people but it's kind of about him that's right that's its strength i think that's what gives it that edge and makes it feel wild and weird and kind of wonderful it's an antidote to is this obsession that people have about likability you know i didn't like that book because no one in it was likable that there's no one in this book that's likeable. Not a single person. And Seabrook's not likeable and that's why I like it. The books that really remind me of
Starting point is 00:56:09 Nigel Richardson. Have you ever read Nigel Richardson? It's a kind of less dysfunctional version of this. He wrote a book called Dog Days in Soho. He wrote a really wonderful book about Brighton called Breakfast in Brighton. Which is wonderful. It starts with him walking in Brighton and painting in someone's house and he gets obsessed by this painting
Starting point is 00:56:26 and he hangs out in his pub in Brighton and meets all these people that swirl in and swirl out and tells all the kind of strange stories about Brighton. They're very similar, but not as crazy. Matthew, have you got a tenuous link this time? Well, the weird thing about this book is there are so many threads in it that literally... Like Rachel was saying earlier,
Starting point is 00:56:43 that thing about you pick it up and you think it's written for you. You know, I had exactly that sense as well. So it was really impossible to find anything because on every page there's something really. From Donald Sinden's memoir, I'm probably the only person under 70 who's read Donald Sinden's memoir, which is wonderfully called A Touch of the Memoirs.
Starting point is 00:57:04 Stephen Toast. That's referred to in this book. Or 39 Steps. Talking about John Buchan, I work with John Buchan's grandson, Toby Buchan. Toby. Wonderful Toby Buchan, kind of fantastic editor. And really everywhere you turn, there's stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:57:19 The other person it reminds me of, I don't know if anyone's read Jonathan Rendell. Do you like Jonathan Rendell? Yeah. There's something about Jonathan Rendell'sall's personality yeah it's very fragile also yeah wrote that amazing book this bloody mary's the last thing i own yeah i think you're right about that definitely also died sadly young died sadly young one thing i would say is this book kind of gets into you and it becomes i I mean, it had a huge influence on me when I wrote my book about the 50s
Starting point is 00:57:47 and that book has a lot of footnotes. Some critics hated that, but I love footnotes. And that was all entirely down to this book because I decided I wanted to write a digressionary sort of book and I managed to put a little tribute in to David Seabrook because one of the women in my book had worked for Lord Northcliffe, the owner of the Daily Mail, and he had a house at Broadstairs. And I put this in the book for
Starting point is 00:58:11 no other reason than for David Seabrook, really, because it had pertained not at all to my thesis. But one day, Lord Northcliffe was on the beach with one of his editors, Hamilton Fife. And Hamilton Fife was very, very shocked because Lord Northcliffe picked up his walking stick and he bashed a seagull and then he beat it to death on the sand. And I thought that was so Seabrookian and that should be in here, shouldn't it? It will always be with me, this book. Funnily enough, I found it very influential. When I reread it this week, I realised that I had inadvertently, I mean, I'd name checkcheck it in the year of reading dangerously,
Starting point is 00:58:47 but I'd lifted a couple of things. But I love books, of which this is a great example of the thing that you were talking about, Rachel, where the author becomes impatient, seemingly, with the reader, even as they are writing the book, and will turn to the reader to say but what about this and there'll be some little
Starting point is 00:59:09 piece of grumpiness or bad temper and Roger Lewis you mentioned in the Private Whittle book we've talked on this podcast about Roger Lewis's Peter Sellers book, that's a brilliant example of it footnotes which are there purely to allow Lewis to bang the table and tell the reader how gross he is.
Starting point is 00:59:26 I could talk about that book all day, because I was at the Sunday Times when that was... We serialised that at the Sunday Times, that Sellers book. I was a very young girl then, and... Oh, Roger Lewis. Well... You can't see it, but Rachel's holding her head in her hands as she says that. Bye, everyone.
Starting point is 00:59:45 We probably ought to draw to a close. We should also say this is the first full podcast that we've done on a non-fiction book. So thank you Rachel for well certainly introducing me to it. I can't believe I love that story about you.
Starting point is 00:59:59 This is exactly why we do this. The fact that this book haunted you for all those years until you found it. It's going to haunt me now forever as well. Thanks to Rachel Cook, to Matthew Clayton and once again to our sponsors Unbound. You can get in touch with us on Twitter
Starting point is 01:00:14 at BacklistedPod, on Facebook at facebook.com forward slash BacklistedPod and on our page on the Unbound site at unbound.co.uk forward slash Backlisted. Thanks for listening. page on the Unbound site at unbound.co.uk forward slash backlisted. Thanks for listening. We'll be back with another show in a fortnight.
Starting point is 01:00:28 Until then. Bye, everyone. Thanks for listening. You can download All the Devils Are Here right now. You can choose to listen to Backlisted with or without adverts. If you prefer to listen to it without adverts, you can join us on our Patreon, patreon.com forward slash backlisted, where you also get bonus content of two episodes of Locklisted,
Starting point is 01:00:59 the podcast where we talk about the books and films and music that we've been listening to over the last couple of weeks.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.