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Category Archives: Stories

Opera Mishaps

19 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

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Giacomo Puccini, Hugh Vickers, Opera, Tosca

bouncing_tosca_by_michael_fSome stories you don’t quite know how to take – especially when they begin to crop up in reference to different circumstances. One such story is that of the bouncing Tosca,  that goes more or less like this: I don’t think I’m spoiling anything if I say that, at the end of the third Act, Tosca escapes conviction and unhappiness by the drastic means of jumping off the ramparts of Castel Sant’Angelo… Continue reading →

The Truthful Things

07 Thursday May 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories

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April's Fool, creative writing, Dinosaurs, Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, MOOC

Coat_of_Arms_of_Duchy_of_CourlandI’ve started a new MOOC with FutureLearn – a creative writing thing. I’m still getting my bearings, but there were a few interesting things during the first week.

At one point, we were asked to write two short paragraphs – one containing three facts and one piece of fiction, and one composed of three fictions and one fact. What I found interesting was one observation during the post-exercise discussion, to the effect that, at times, the truthful things are the element that sound most invented.

And  yes – I don’t think I’d ever thought of it in these terms, but it happens often enough. Or, at least, it is surprisingly easy to have someone nitpick at things that are absolutely and genuinely true.

And I am not speaking of the dreaded But It Really Happened Like This – not at all.

A friend of mine was once berated by an editor for writing dinosaurs in a story of his, that were not plausible. Except, my friend is a paleontologist, so odds are that his dinosaurs stood on very sound scientific ground.

I’ve had my fair share of this on historical matters, but my favourite case happened with my Italian blog, the one time I tried to play an April’s Fool prank. Now, in Italy April’s Fool goes under the name of Pesce d’Aprile – that is to say April Fish – so it seemed appropriate to make up a slightly preposterous story, set it against an unlikely historical backdrop in the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, and sprinkle it with fish-things: surnames, metaphors, knightly orders, similitudes, a little fake bibliography, a ducal banquet… you get the drift: everything, but everything had fins. I had great fun writing it, and posted it on the Ist of April – and nobody got it.

All my readers assumed that the story was genuine – all except one.

“You got the fish?” I asked her, and the answer was, “No – what fish? I very nearly swallowed it, but the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia was a bit much.”

Except, you see, Courland is a real place, or at least was for several centuries, and is still there, as a part of Lithuania. But it sounded invented. It sounded Ruritanian, I suppose, and therefore not plausible…

Now, in this case I was I was deliberately playing fast and loose with truth and fiction and, when I’m not playing pranks, it is my firm belief that playing Spot The Departure From The Sources is seldom the best way to enjoy a novel* – but I find it fascinating to see how we arbitrarily decide what is, must be or cannot possibly be true.

____________________________________

* This, of course, does NOT apply to anachronisms and glaring errors.

History & Stories

11 Saturday Apr 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories

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Historical fiction, History, Rudyard Kipling, writing

HistoryIt strikes me that this particular piece of K-wisdom is a near-perfect motto for this blog…

And it’s not unlikely I’ll adopt it as such.

Incidentally, it goes very well with Kipling’s two books of “history” stories, and his other occasional foray into historical fiction. There are not many – just enough to make me wish he had written more.

Also, this would make a nice answer to the unavoidable question of Why Historical Fiction…

Were you ever asked? And what did you say?

Silent Alice

07 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

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Alice in Wonderland, Cecil Hepworth, silent movie, Sir John Tenniel

alice-chased-by-the-cardsThe first Alice film ever is this tiny 1903 silent, a relic from the  very infancy of cinema…

Just think: a hundred and twelve years ago. Continue reading →

The Organist and the Sailor

02 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

≈ 6 Comments

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Billy Budd, Noreen Hennessy, Peter Ustinov, Prince Edward Theatre, Sydney, Wurlitzer

Organist drawingFor many years Noreen Hennessy was quite the character in Sydney, where she worked as the resident organist at the Prince Edward Theatre. Now, I was surprised to discover that theatres and cinemas (and the Prince Edward doubled as both things) had resident organists long after the transition from silent films to talkies – but they did, and they were often very famous and popular. Continue reading →

The Discovery of Rebecca

12 Thursday Mar 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories, Theatre

≈ 3 Comments

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characters, Ivanhoe, Lady Rowena, Rebecca of York, stage adaptation, Walter Scott, writing

IvanhoeI was eleven when I wrote my first stage adaptation of Sir Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe (a much abridged children’s translation), and even pestered a bunch of classmates into staging it. Yes, I know, I know…  Continue reading →

Because It Isn’t There

05 Thursday Mar 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

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crime drama, mysteries, police procedurals, storytelling, Thomas Berger, writing

lansbury-as-miss-marple-reading-up-on-poisonsThere is this very sweet elderly lady I’ve known all my life. She’s past eighty, unmarried, very busy with gardening, embroidery and good deeds. And she is a voracious reader – with a taste, it turns out, for crime stories, mysteries and thrillers. Oh, and police procedurals on the telly. The gorier they are, the better Miss M. likes them. Continue reading →

World Read Aloud Day

04 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

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#WRAD2015, Edward Lear, Litworld.org, Reading aloud, Rudyard Kipling, World Read Aloud Day

litworldWRAD15logo-web2Out of schedule, I know…

Did you know it is World Read Aloud Day?A whole day, all over the world, devoted to this age-old, all-important way to share written words, stories and ideas.

Have a look at the dedicated LitWorld website, enjoy clips of Kipling’s The Smugglers’ Song and Lear’s The Owl and the Pussycat read aloud, and maybe, before the day is over, find someone to read something to.

A Tale of Two (Small) Cities

03 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

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A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens, Eugene Mullin, Nickelodeon, Silent film, Vitagraph

Sydney1911Vitagraph was perhaps the most famous amongst the Nickelodeon Era studios, specializing in historical scenes and literary adaptations. Back in the time of one- or two-reel movies, these pioneers adapted for the screen a good deal of Shakespeare and classic novels – the challenge being to tell a complete story in ten or twenty minutes. Continue reading →

The Recall

07 Saturday Feb 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories

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Actions and Reactions, Kipling Year, Poetry, Rudyard Kipling, University of Adelaide

ActionsA little Kipling today – it’s his year, after all.

I love The Recall, a little poem taken from Action and Reactions – one of many collections of short stories and poetry.

It is a small, dream-like thing of home-coming – even when you don’t know you are coming home – and the power of place, something that, according to Peter Ackroyd, is deeply rooted in English imagination. Continue reading →

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