{"id":34,"date":"2001-08-07T00:00:40","date_gmt":"2001-08-07T00:00:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/?p=34"},"modified":"2006-08-03T21:30:27","modified_gmt":"2006-08-03T21:30:27","slug":"dunnett-newsletter-7th-may-2001","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/old-newsletters\/dunnett-newsletter-7th-may-2001.php","title":{"rendered":"Dunnett Newsletter &#8211; 7th May 2001"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Greetings from a Scotland which seems to have skipped Spring and gone straight    into Summer after a cold and wet April.This newsletter is mostly concerned with the recent first AGM of the Dorothy    Dunnett Readers Association (DDRA) and associated mini-gathering. I had hoped    to have some more &#8220;Answers from Dorothy&#8221; but she has been busily working    away with Elspeth Morrison on the second volume of the Companion so those will    have to wait for a while. They have to have the manuscript of Vol 2 ready for    mid-summer although publication is not due until the following summer. Which    brings me to the first news item.<\/p>\n<p><strong>UK DISTRIBUTION OF THE COMPANION<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Although world rights for the new paperback edition of the original Companion    had been sold to Random House\/Vintage, I had been having no success in discovering    how (or indeed if) the Companion would be distributed in the UK. On turning    to Dorothy&#8217;s agent for help I heard that Penguin\/Michael Joseph were now regretting    their sale of world rights and were trying to buy back the UK rights for it.    Now this might be good news for UK, Commonwealth and European readers if only    it had come sooner, however there are severe doubts as to whether a Penguin    edition could be put together in time to match the US publication date &#8211; the    estimates I&#8217;ve been given have suggested November and I&#8217;ve told them that if    that were the earliest that could be done then most international (and probably    most internet connected UK) readers would simply order from the US via Amazon    or other US-based internet booksellers. This situation is liable to constant    change so please understand the position and that we cannot take orders for    it until we have a firm decision on what&#8217;s happening.<\/p>\n<p><strong>AUDIOBOOKS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The second piece of news is that FW Howes are going ahead with the audiobook    recording of Queens&#8217; Play and are currently auditioning narrators, having taken    on board the comments that I and others have given them regarding Game of Kings.    We are probably looking at a date sometime in September\/October for release    but this is obviously open to change. As is my normal practice I won&#8217;t take    any orders until I have an ISBN for it, but I will circulate a message both    in a general newsletter and a special one to everyone who ordered or expressed    interest in GK, so there should be no danger of missing the boat.<\/p>\n<p><strong>EDINBURGH IN THE SPRING &#8211; THE DDRA AGM AND MINI-GATHERING<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Saturday<\/p>\n<p>This took place at the Point Hotel in Edinburgh on the 21st April and although    numbers were a little lower than expected (possibly due to the foot-and-mouth    crisis) it was a worthwhile and enjoyable experience for all and we even had    a couple of overseas visitors.<br \/>\nThe venue itself was spectacular, as we were on the top floor of the hotel with    glass on most sides allowing wonderful vistas over the city, with the castle    in particular standing out only a stone&#8217;s throw away. The AGM itself took very    little time as much of it was the formality of approving the constitution and    accepting the nominees for council. Val Bierman gave a brief summary of the    magazine and of the winding-up of the old Dunnett Trust after the Edinburgh    2000 Gathering. We were indebted to Pauline Brace for chairing the meeting during    the handover from the steering committee to the new council.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Elspeth&#8217;s Talk<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>After a short break we were given a talk by Elspeth Morrison in which she described    a little of her recent work on the second volume of the Dorothy Dunnett Companion,    and how it has differed from the first volume where much of the task was in    reconstructing the researches that DD had made. This time there has been much    more collaboration possible whereas on the first volume Dorothy was busy writing    the HN series.<\/p>\n<p>Elspeth finds it hard to read the books for pleasure as she is constantly looking    for things that she may need to research and reference. She acknowledges that    there will inevitably be things that are left out that someone will want to    know about. Particularly in the original volume there was a great deal of HN    material which simply couldn&#8217;t be included because it risked giving away parts    of the plot.<\/p>\n<p>In many case the quotes that people wish to reference are actually just fragments    &#8211; there is no more &#8211; it is the context that Dorothy puts them into that is important.    It is also the case that there isn&#8217;t the 20 or 30 years available for research    that Dorothy has accumulated, and there are the limitations of the publishing    process to contend with, so there has to be some trimming down. Elspeth remarked    that she had three criteria &#8211; is it relevant, is it fun, is it sexy!!<\/p>\n<p>In doing research related to Scottish history it is important to be aware of    who is married to whom. The is an oft-mentioned quote which says that everyone    is related in Scotland and without church dispensation no-one would be able    to marry anyone else. She mentioned that in many cases she found herself treading    the same paths as Dorothy had and that many of the items that she was able to    trace are in footnotes or in bibliographies in the secondary sources &#8211; which    means a great deal of reading for often quite minor points. This time around    she has been able to use Dorothy&#8217;s own library but of course there is far too    much to go through everything and she found herself constantly having to resist    being sidetracked by interesting volumes that happened to sit next to crucial    books on the shelves. On occasion there would be delightful discoveries &#8211; one    such was to find that a historical character in the HN was the source of a quote    used by Lymond &#8211; &#8220;amiable as a fawn lively as a girl&#8221; (unfortunately    I wasn&#8217;t quick enough in my note-taking to catch who this was &#8211; I shall have    to ask Elspeth next time we speak).<\/p>\n<p>Elspeth then went on to give a quick verbal tour of the Royal Mile, as an addition    to the excellent notes she provided to the delegates for their own excursions.    These are too detailed to repeat here but one interesting item that came up    was in reference to the old Tolbooth building &#8211; where Kathi goes on various    errands and overhears the plotting. The Tolbooth records are all documented    &#8211; who paid what rent etc. &#8211; so we know exactly what business went on there and    who was involved.<\/p>\n<p>Following a break for an excellent (if rather cramped) lunch where there was    much lively discussion, not to mention an impromptu demonstration of divining    by Jo Kirkham who had featured a professional diviner at a recent Rye get-together,    we settled down to listen to our second speaker &#8211; Pauline Brace. Pauline gave    us a detailed talk on plurality in King Hereafter and compared and contrasted    the story given us by Shakespeare with that given us by DD, with a look at the    historical sources and inherent politics involved in the former&#8217;s depiction,    and looking at why he extracted the elements he did for dramatic purposes. Later    she went on to look at the historical character of Thorfinn and gave us some    reasons behind Dorothy&#8217;s theory. Now I must confess that my note-taking was    quite useless in the face of the stream of information, reasoning and theorising    that Pauline presented us with &#8211; and her mellifluous speaking voice frequently    had me lost in thought as I tried to consider her arguments, only to discover    that while I&#8217;d been thinking she&#8217;d already moved well into the next point! All    I can say is that you should take any chance to hear her speak and hope that    she may present her own summary of this talk in Whispering Gallery.<\/p>\n<p>Towards the end of the afternoon, just before Pauline finished her talk, a    special visitor arrived &#8211; Dorothy herself of course! I know of at least two    people who had never been to a Dunnett gathering of any sort who were almost    speechless with pleasure to be introduced to her, and as always she managed    to find time for everyone.<br \/>\nI should also mention that after all her hard work, Val Bierman was forced to    dash away and indeed missed the Sunday trip altogether, as there came an urgent    report that she was about to become a grandmother. As it turned out the baby    didn&#8217;t arrive that weekend after all, though I hope by now everything has been    safely and successfully resolved.<\/p>\n<p>Sunday<\/p>\n<p>The original trip to Dean Castle having been cancelled because of the foot-and-mouth    outbreak, we instead had a two-part trip to Linlithgow Palace and Rosslyn Chapel.    Unfortunately we were not favoured by the weather which was rather wet, but    the worst of it seemed to occur while we had coffee and cakes at the Bridge    Inn at Ratho (which is an centre for sailings on the Union Canal) on the way    to Linlithgow. As we drove on, local enthusiast Val Dean was able to point out    to us the area where the recent find was made of a complete iron age chariot,    which is causing great excitement amongst archaeologists. Prior to entering    the Palace we were grateful to the elders of St. Michael&#8217;s Church for allowing    us to pay a quick visit to the plaque which commemorates Anselm Adorne.<\/p>\n<p>Linlithgow is a magnificent building in a superb setting overlooking the loch,    and yet for some reason is often underappreciated on the usual tourist trail.    Mary de Guise rated it finer than all the palaces of France and to see it in    it&#8217;s splendor before the fire which destroyed its roof and interior paneling    and decorations must have been a great experience. My one disappointment on    this trip was that the courtyard fountain was covered in boarding and scaffolding    as it is being conserved at the moment. However there was plenty to explore    and photograph, and it was a great pleasure to go round with others of a similar    interest (and in particular Elspeth).<br \/>\nI&#8217;ve added some pictures to the Dunnett Places to Visit page on the website    which I hope will give you a flavour of the place, even in the rain. (www.jamesthin.co.uk\/duvisits.htm)<\/p>\n<p>After returning to the bus we headed off to Roslin where we met up with local    Dunnett fan and Rosslyn Chapel expert Joy Madden, where we first had lunch at    the local hotel before heading up to the chapel itself. I had not been inside    the chapel for some years and I must confess I had forgotten just what a marvel    it is. If the carvings were instead plasterwork it would still be magnificent    &#8211; but you have to constantly remind yourself that this delicate tracery of foliage    or that leering face or graceful angel is actually solid stone. The mind is    continually overwhelmed by the layers of detail as you look at, for instance,    an archway, then see the shaping of its columns, then the pointed decoration    on them, then the fact that all those points have flat surfaces which are again    decorated, and that there are figures and symbols and faces at all the intersections    and in all the nooks and crannies. Then there is the Apprentice Pillar, which    would be a substantial achievement if it were a computer projection with the    machine available to work out the DNA-like geometry for you and layer the spiral    decoration on top of a pre-existing fluted column &#8211; to imagine a mason actually    carving it from stone almost defies belief.<br \/>\nJoy was a great help to us all in explaining aspects of the construction and    renovation work, and also the Sinclair, Templar and Masonic signs and symbolism,    and trying to divide fact from fiction in some of the more outlandish theories    which abound in this unique building. Down in a lower section she was able to    show us some of the mason&#8217;s geometrical workings inscribed on the stone and    I would have dearly loved to have been on a one-to-one tour and to have discussed    it all in more detail.<\/p>\n<p>A trip up to the roof which is currently covered with an elaborate canopy to    assist in drying out the damp stonework showed that the decoration continued    even at the top of the building, while it was amazing to hear from Joy that    the original foundations indicate that the chapel was to have been another 91    feet long.<\/p>\n<p>Again I have added some interior picture of the chapel to the website &#8211; I was    pleasantly surprised that nearly all the shots I took were sharp, as all those    I&#8217;ve so far had back were taken at long shutter speeds of up to two seconds    with only a monopod for support (tripods are frowned on in the chapel). I did    take some others with flash later but have yet to get them developed.<br \/>\nAll in all an excellent day despite the rain and I hope that all the visitors    enjoyed themselves over the weekend.<\/p>\n<p><strong>DUNNETT PLACES IN EUROPE<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Before moving on I must mention, for those of you who didn&#8217;t see the announcement    on the discussion groups, that at the beginning of April I added to the new    Dunnett Places to Visit in Europe page a large number of pictures of Malta and    Gozo which were very kindly sent to me by Monica Murray, who also supplied the    quotations which are included. As if this were not generous enough she also    sent a picture of a chateau which she thinks may have been the inspiration for    Sevigny and a description of a very Gaultier-ish sounding restaurant. Many thanks    Monica, and also thanks to Kathleen Shaw who also sent in a description of the    Loire area and a useful website address.<\/p>\n<p><strong>THE RETURN OF CONFESSIONS OF A DUNNETT READER<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It&#8217;s quite a while since I last gave you &#8220;Confessions of a Dunnett Reader&#8221;,    and perhaps it is in any case a rather different beast now than back in the    days when I was a novice reader working my way through the LC and reviving everyone&#8217;s    memories of their own first time.<\/p>\n<p>A year ago I was on holiday on the island of Islay, and struck down with the    flu, was reading the Icelandic scenes of TWLW &#8211; an interesting exercise when    lapsing in and out of fever and dreaming some very strange dreams during which    I was totally convinced that I had complete understanding of the entire series.    For some reason I couldn&#8217;t quite remember the secrets when I returned to the    land of the feverless!!<\/p>\n<p>TLWL struck a number of chords with me, the most important being the relationship    between Nicholas and Kathi. That they are spiritually close is by now a given,    and this is of course continued through the rest of the series. Some people    have problems with the fact that he seeks her out for some activities and that    there are some areas that he and Gelis never share &#8211; music being the most obvious.    Many of these readers find it difficult to allow him to have two &#8220;loves&#8221;.    My own take on this is coloured by an unhappiness with a common social attitude    that has been prevalent, at least in this country, until very recently, which    says that it is impossible for married men to have a friendship with another    woman without sex being involved. This is an attitude I have always disliked    because I&#8217;ve often found myself having friendships with women and vehemently    object when it is assumed that there is something else going on.<\/p>\n<p>I have long believed that in the HN Dorothy was giving us a story that was    much more like real life than the obviously heroic story of Lymond. In the LC    it was natural that L &#038; P would turn out to be soul-mates and compliment    each other in every way &#8211; the perfect match. Though for the most part hardly    romantic at all, the LC was in its later stages the ultimate in heroic romance.    She&#8217;d done that and HN was always going to be very different. To me Nick&#8217;s relationship    with Gelis is much more like a real marriage &#8211; if you ignore for the moment    the years of conflict over Jodi; and therefore his other relationship with Kathi    needs to be seen in the same light. In real life men and women often relate    fine on one level but not at all on another &#8211; how many wives completely fail    to understand what it means to their husbands to play golf, or climb mountains,    or play music or chess or even just go out with the lads every now and again.    Naturally it works the other way too and husbands totally miss the point over    some aspect of their wives&#8217; activities that means nothing to them. Yet these    are often perfectly stable and fulfilling marriages. This is what we see in    the Nick, Gelis, Kathie triangle (though as always with Dorothy there is more    going on as well) &#8211; Nick and Gelis have a great shared interest in the mechanics    of trade and business and she is his equal in this area. There is also their    wonderful sexual compatibility which is illustrated so well later on in C&#038;R    and Gemini. However she doesn&#8217;t have music in her skill set and this becomes    an area which is essential to Nick&#8217;s existence &#8211; without someone to share this    with he isn&#8217;t whole. I don&#8217;t see this as some people do as meaning that he needs    two loves, in fact Kathi could just have easily have been male in this respect,    merely that in real life we find different elements of contact in different    people. Admittedly we see far less of Gelis&#8217; side of the story, which is perhaps    a shame but then the series would have ended up being another couple of volumes    long and practical considerations always have to be born in mind. The thought    occurs that there is an amusing contrast in things that Nicholas and Lymond    have to learn in their respective journeys &#8211; Nick has to learn that you can    love someone without sex being involved; Lymond took a long time to realise    that you could have sex and that love *could* also be involved!<\/p>\n<p>However, to return to TLWL, one of the things I most enjoyed about it was seeing    Nicholas put back into a more basic and unrefined arena than the high-politics    one in which he usually operates. Seeing how he wins over a native population    who have no reason to side with him other than what they see of his character.    He is also nicely contrasted with Pauel Beneke, who is first his opponent and    then an essential part of his small party who have to work together to survive    in a hostile environment. Their later relationship in Poland is perhaps the    ultimate expression of the sort of male friendship that is seen in football    or rugby team-mates who play hard , fight hard and drink hard &#8211; who would come    close to killing each other in a fight but would as certainly defend each other    to the death if required. The very opposite of the platonic man-woman relationship    that exists between Nick and Kathi.<\/p>\n<p>This is of necessity a short summary of reactions which omits a great deal    of importance to the series and is coloured by the continued readings of the    later books, and the discussions on the various internet groups, which even    when I can&#8217;t keep up enough to contribute in I try to keep up with reading.    I moved on to Caprice and Rondo in that same April of last year &#8211; desperate    to finish it before Gemini appeared so I could approach that with the required    perspective along with everyone else. Just as I never entirely subscribed to    the &#8220;Lymond as Ice-Man&#8221; approach to RC, seeing instead the re-emergence    from an isolated period that was the inevitable result of the trauma of PiF,    I didn&#8217;t feel the same horror at the Nick descending to the depths of depravity    interpretation which many see in C&#038;R&#8217;s early chapters. Yes he was close    to giving it all up and going off with Beneke to a pirate&#8217;s live, yes he was    careless of his own and other lives in a way that was unlike him, but to me    it was always going to be an episode that was a relief from the tangled life    and only-hinted-at complex responsibility of his extended family. I had no doubt    that he would revert to his normal self, if such a thing can be said of a man    who is gradually learning a broader perspective that someone of his station    in life should normally have had as part of their upbringing We are of course    continually kept guessing at his true morality &#8211; his gallant offering of his    bow to Adorne to avoid the other&#8217;s humiliation despite their apparent position    as enemies is immediately contrasted with his wounding of Julius in mysterious    circumstances. And what on earth is going on between him and Anna during the    trip south to Caffa and beyond? And yet by then one has the feeling that he    is back in command of a basically moral attitude which we have to contrast with    some other dubious episodes such as the &#8220;Scottish Plan&#8221;. Then of course    we have the reappearance of Ludovico de Bologna who has been cast as the annoying    interfering religious bigot for much of the series, but is gradually being seen    in a rather more positive light. If I was a genius or a charlatan I would now    claim to have immediately spotted the required reassessment of the early denouncement    of Julius by this same curious churchman. Alas I can claim no such flash of    inspiration but only a gradual and growing awareness that things may not be    what they seem in all the old relationships.<br \/>\nMore later.<\/p>\n<p><strong>PERSONAL APPEARANCES<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Dorothy will be appearing at the Edinburgh Book Festival on the 15th August    at 11.30am. Tickets will be available via the Festival organisers &#8211;<br \/>\nplease check their site at http:\/\/www.edbookfest.co.uk for booking details.<\/p>\n<p>Best wishes to you all.<\/p>\n<p>Bill<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Greetings from a Scotland which seems to have skipped Spring and gone straight into Summer after a cold and wet April.This newsletter is &hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-34","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-old-newsletters"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/34","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=34"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/34\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=34"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=34"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dorothydunnett.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=34"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}