October Books 10) Sudan: Darfur and the Failure of an African State, by Richard Cockett

Cockett is the Economist’s Africa editor, and has produced here a very readable account of the last few decades and years in Sudan, explaining how the Darfur crisis came about and exploring the international reaction to both Darfur and the sputtering implementation of the peace agreement between the government in Khartoum and the southern part of the country.

Among those professionally engaged in Sudanese matters I am a member of the small minority who are not covering Darfur at all, so I found this book very useful in contextualising my own concerns within the international community’s wider agenda. Cockett explores rather viciously (though I have seen even more vicious analysis) the impact of international activism on Sudanese politics and Western policy. He also has a couple of good sections on Asian involvement, particularly but not only China. I missed, however, a decent explanation of the roles of Libya and Chad in Darfur, which borders both. I was also puzzled by his repeated bemoaning of how the politics of building coalition governments doomed Sudan; it’s not clear to me (and it certainly isn’t clear from his account) that the current regime, effectively a one-party state with a few southern trimmings, has delviered better results than its predecessors. And although the chronology of events in Darfur in the recent period is good, and the accounts of the conditions of life and death are pretty horrific and memorable, I wiould have liked to read a judicious summing up of what exactly had happened and who he thinks was really to blame.

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October Books 9) The Great Tradition, by F.R. Leavis

Back in my Cambridge undergraduate days, we Natural Scientists had a joke about the guy studying English who did not want to look out of the window in the morning, because then he would have had nothing to do in the afternoon. But as I have got more interested in sf criticism, I have felt that maybe I did miss something by not sampling what was on offer in terms of literature studies in the department which was still resting on its laurels from the glory days of Leavis (or rather the Leavises). So I picked up this volume to get a sense of what, if anything, I have been missing.

Well, it’s as I expected in one way: Leavis is very judgmental and allows little room for argument. The first half-sentence affirms that “[t]he great English novelists are Jane Austen, George Eliot, Henry James and Joseph Conrad”, and the rest of the book is an elaboration of the greatness of the latter three (Jane Austen having received a separate book of her own). Not having read much of the authors in question, let alone of those who Leavis dismisses as less than great, I can only really react by assessing whether or not Leavis gives me a fresh understanding of those books that I have in fact read, and also by taking his recommendations of books I haven’t read as potential future reading.

Leavis does not really satisfy me on the first count. His concept of “greatness” is nowhere clearly enough defined for me to feel whether or not I agree with it, let alone whether or not it’s a useful criterion for assessing the quality of a novel. We all know that there are good books and bad books, and most of us will agree that, say, Pride and Prejudice is good, Jonathan Livingston Seagull is bad, and American Gods is good but flawed. Not everyone will do so: there are plenty of people who find Austen’s prose impenetrable, Bach deep and meaningful, or Gaiman either indigestible or worthy of uncritical admiration. It is sometimes nice to imagine that there are vaguely objective criteria out there which one can appeal to, and I had sort of hoped that Leavis would fairly clearly signpost what those criteria might be. But he doesn’t.

However, if I take Leavis’ analysis as an expression of taste, his taste is sufficiently close to mine (we diverge on Wuthering Heights, where I know that I am in the minority who find the book pretty unappealing, but are agreed on Middlemarch and Heart of Darkness) that I did find his recommendations of other novels worth reading, including several by writers outside his chosen few, very interesting: the following therefore go on my Bookmooch list and my Amazon (hawk, spit) wishlist:

Benjamin Disraeli: Coningsby, Sybil and Tancred
George Eliot: Adam Bede and Daniel Deronda (though Leavis recommends skipping the bits that are actually about Daniel Deronda and concentrating on the bits about Gwendolen)
Henry James: The Portrait of a Lady and The Bostonians
Joseph Conrad: Nostromo and The Secret Agent
Charles Dickens: Hard Times

A final thought: I’m writing this on a train and won’t edit again before I post when I reach my hotel this evening, but I’d be very interested to know if Heart of Darkness might have influenced H.P. Lovecraft. (Or, if I have the chronology wrong, vice versa.) Leavis entirely fairly accuses Conrad of going well over the top, in the style of a ‘magazine writer’ influenced by Kipling and Poe rather than with the subtlety he was capable of. But the passages he chooses to illustrate this point seemed to me very reminiscent of At the Mountains of Madness. I guess that probably (as Leavis sort of implies) the two have common roots in pulp literature.

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Whoniversaries 20 October

i) births and deaths

20 October 1941: birth of Anneke Wills, who played Polly Wright, companion of the First and Second Doctors, from 1966 to 1967 and has reprised the role a couple of times for Big Finish in 2009-10.

20 October 2008: death of John Ringham who played Tlotoxl in The Aztecs (1964), Josiah Blake in The Smugglers (1966), and Robert Ashe in Colony in Space (1971).

20 October 2009: death of Hubert Rees who played the Chief Engineer in Fury from the Deep (1968), Captain Ransom in The War Games (1969), and Stevenson in The Seeds of Doom (1976).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

20 October 1979: broadcast of fourth episode of City of Death, the one with John Cleese, Eleanor Bron, and the punch that saves the universe. Really, if you haven’t seen it, you ought to.

20 October 2008: broadcast of first episode of Secrets of the Stars (SJA). A mysterious astrologer is able to tell Sarah Jane’s history with the Doctor; Clyde appears to be under his influence.

iii) date specified in canon

20 October 1901: The cargo ship Lankester is sailing from Madagascar to New Orleans with passengers including the Sixth Doctor, Peri and some even stranger entities – as told in the Big Finish audio Cryptobiosis (2005).

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Whoniversaries 19 October: Paradise Towers #3, Remembrance of the Daleks #3, Vault of Secrets #2

19 October 1987: broadcast of third episode of Paradise Towers. Mel is rather implausibly rescued by Pex; the Caretaker is munched by Kroagnon; and the Doctor taken by the Cleaners.

19 October 1988: broadcast of third episode of Remembrance of the Daleks. The Hand of Omega is dug up and the rivals Dalek factions start to slug it out in the school.

19 October 2010: broadcast of second episode of The Vault of Secrets (SJA).

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October Books 8) Advise and Consent, by Allen Drury

Another little reading project of mine: as well as reading the best-selling novels of 100 year ago, as I have done this year and last year, I decided to try the best-selling novel of 50 years ago, a political tale by a long-serving Washington journalist, which soon after (1962) became a film starring Henry Fonda and Charles Laughton (the latter’s last role before he died).

The plot concerns the nomination of a new Secretary of State by an ailing President whose party controls both Senate and House; the nomination runs into difficulties because of the nominee’s alleged Communist past. But the young Senator from Utah who is most responsible for holding up the process is himself concealing a wartime gay love affair. High drama ensues, with a memorable series of denouements of which the least spoilerish that I can reveal is a Soviet moon landing the week before the Americans would have got there.

I thought it was excellent. There are a number of well delineated characters – the Majority Leader, the ancient Senator from South Carolina, the Mormon with a past, the demagogue, the guy who wanted to be President, the President himself. The Senate is a microcosm of 100 people (99 men and one woman at that time), each with roles to play both officially and privately. Advise and Consent is an incisive description of how politics operates at that highest level, when personality as well as facts and ideology come into play. I found it difficult to put down.

It has its weaknesses. The reported vehemently pro-appeasement views of the nominee for Secretary of State – and indeed the public support he gets for them – seemed to me unrealistic, though I wasn’t around in the 1960s so I may not know. It’s possible that Drury was reversing the political reality, as he does with the Joe McCarthy character who is a left-winger rather than a right-winger. There are four ambassadors who are minor characters; it seemed peculiar to me that they get called together twice to give the key Senators their views of what the rest of the world thinks – normal practice, round here at any rate, would be to see them separately, but of course that doesn’t work for a novel like this. Also they seem to be accredited to the UN as well as to Washington but that may have been normal in 1960.

But I was able to roll with the main flow and greatly enjoy the book. Apparently the Pulitzer Prize Committee in 1960 recommended that the award go to Henderson the Rain KingAdvise and Consent instead, and rightly so.

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Whoniversaries 18 October

production and broadcast anniversaries

18 October 1963: Studio recording for "An Unearthly Child" (the version that was broadcast).

18 October 1975: broadcast of fourth episode of Planet of Evil. The Doctor clears the antimatter from the ship and restores Sorenson (who doesn’t really deserve it in my view) to his normal self.

18 October 1980: broadcast of fourth episode of Meglos. The Doctor frustrates the evil cactus’s plans, Brotadac accidentally destroys Zolfa-Thura, and the Deons and Savants agree to get along better in future.

18 October 1986: broadcast of third episode of Mindwarp (ToaTL #7). Brain transplants and battles; Peri is captured and prepped for her ‘orrible fate.

18 October 1989: broadcast of third episode of Ghost Light (the last episode made of Old Who). Light is displeased; the women turn to stone; Control turns into a woman; and I’m sure it made sense to me when I watched it.

18 October 2010: broadcast of first episode of The Vault of Secrets (SJA).

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October Books 7) Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand

It took me several weeks, but I have finished Rand’s magnum opus, about a woman who likes running trains and clever rich people going on strike. I will leave detailed analysis to those who care more about it than me – I refer especially to John Scalzi’s critique, which has links in comments to a couple more posts on it. (Here’s one: "There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.")

Having not especially enjoyed Rand’s The Fountainhead, I was surprised by how readable Atlas Shrugged actually is. Once you accept the ridiculous premises of the fantasy world Rand has constructed, the plot moves along at a fairly cracking pace as long as you ignore the political speeches (and there aren’t in fact all that many of them, though one of them does go on for fifty pages).The evil guys are evil, the good guys are mysterious and threatened, and Dagny’s moral dilemma is almost realistic.

It is of course an absurdly premised book. The dystopian society that Rand portrays is rather closer to We and Nineteen Eighty-Four than to anything the US is ever likely to develop into. Her heroes’ response, to sabotage the economy and steal from their own companies, is itself pretty immoral. (At one stage she has a whole trainload of lefty do-gooders killed, but we are meant to understand that it’s OK because they had it coming to them.) The fundamental axiom that you should never do anything for anyone else is impossible to comprehend for anyone who has ever contemplated having children (or even pets) and is in fact contradicted when the good guys rescue one of their number near the end. But on its own merits it holds together, and I think it’s possible to admire the structure without sharing the sentiments.

Atlas Shrugged is certainly a work of sf; quite apart from the new metal developed by Hank Rearden, Galt is able to conceal his valley refuge by arcane means and, Vogon-like, to take over every radio in the country to broadcast his message, and there is the catastrophic explosion of Project X. So I think it qualifies as one of the important political sf novels that any fan with an interest in politics should consider reading; but I also hope that not too many people take it seriously.

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October Books 6) The Crystal Bucephalus, by Craig Hinton

I had been puzzling over the title of this Fifth Doctor novel since I first heard of it; what gadget could conceivably be made of crystal and also named for Alexander the Great’s horse? As it transpires there is a double explanation: there is a crystal statue of the horse, which turns out to have extra powers, but also the statue is located in a restaurant named after it. Rather oddly the Doctor turns out to be the owner of both statue and restaurant. Lots of similarly wacky (or wackier) nomenclature in the book, not all of which completely gels, though enough does to keep one going; I loved the idea of the Lazarus Intent, a religion combining a garbled Christianity with the monsters of the Whoniverse, and am impressed that Hilton found something useful to do with Kamelion.

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Whoniversaries 17 October: Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who Weekly, Damaged Goods

i) births and deaths

17 October 1966: birth of Mark Gatiss, author of TV stories The Unquiet Dead (2005), The Idiot’s Lantern (2006) and Victory of the Daleks (2010), of four novels and two Big Finish audios, and also plays the eponymous scientist in The Lazarus Experiment (2007).

ii) publication anniversaries

17 October 1979: cover date of first issue of Doctor Who Weekly, now of course Doctor Who Magazine.

17 October 1996: publication of New Adventures novel Damaged Goods, by one Russell T. Davies. I wonder if he kept up his interest in Doctor Who?

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Delicious LiveJournal Links for 10-17-2010

  • …my own prediction is that even if the margin between unionist and nationalist parties should slip still further in the decades to come (though I doubt that it will have changed much by 2021), the outcome of any referendum vote will remain securely on the pro-Union side, no matter how badly led unionism is in the future.
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Whoniversaries 16 October: Myth Makers #1, Hand of Fear #3, Prisoner of the Judoon #2

broadcast anniversaries

16 October 1965: broadcast of “Temple of Secrets”, the first episode of the story we now call The Myth Makers. Achilles slays Hector (who was distracted by the Tardis appearing) and decides that the Doctor is Zeus. Steven is captured by Odysseus, and the Tardis stolen.

16 October 1976: broadcast of third episode of The Hand of Fear. The RAF fail to destroy the reactor; but the hand regereates into Eldrad the Kastrian. The Doctor agrees to take her home, but she is impaled by a booby-trap.

16 October 2009: broadcast of second episode of Prisoner of the Judoon (SJA). Luke stops the countdown; more Judoon arrive, and terrify Rani’s parents, but leave with their prisoner and without causing further damage.

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Whoniversaries 15 October

broadcast anniversaries

15 October 1966: broadcast of second episode of The Tenth Planet. The Cybermen take over the base. “Our scientists and doctors devised spare parts for our bodies until we could be almost completely replaced.”

15 October 1977: broadcast of third episode of The Invisible Enemy. Leela and K9 defend the laboratory while the cloned Doctor and Leela explore the real Doctor’s brain. And what is that giant prawn thing at the end?

15 October 2007: broadcast of first episode of Warriors of Kudlak (SJA). Children who play Combat 3000 are going missing; Luke and Clyde investigate and get teleported away…

15 October 2009: broadcast of first episode of Prisoner of the Judoon (SJA) starting the third season of SJA. A Judoon spaceship crashes and the evil Androvax escapes; it possesses poor old Sarah and prepares to destroy Bannerman Road.

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October Books 5) Pies and Prejudice, by Stuart Maconie

A couple of years back I read Bill Bryson’s Notes from a Small Island and wasn’t hugely impressed. This, on the other hand, is a wonderful book about the North of England, prefaced by the Ninth Doctor quote, “Lots of planets have a north”, written with affection and humour, and occasional rage against Southern and/or London prejudices. As a non-English person myself, I don’t have a particular stake other than cheering for the underdog; as someone who has a fascination for micro-cultures, I loved Maconie’s exploration of the great cities of Northern England through pop music and football, even though those are both subjects which I am vaguely aware of rather than passionately interested in.

It is one of the few books where I actively wished I could hear the author reading it. Words on a page are all very well, but I imagine that Maconie had retained his Wigan accent, which would surely add colour to his delivery of lines like the way the Liver Birds are unlikely to fly away from Liverpool, because they are made of metal and nailed to the Liver Building, or the awful effects of his family’s cooking tradition on his childhood morale. When his Golbourne Colliery relatives were sent tins of spaghetti in solidarity by Heinz workers during the miners’ strike, these unfamiliar culinary objects “were regarded with suspicion. Rumour had it they’d become contaminated with flavour and tastiness and contained no pastry whatsoever.”

Anyway, an excellent and enlightening book, for anyone with the slightest curiosity about Northern England.

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Whoniversaries 14 October: Shaun Sutton, Katy Manning, Abominable Snowmen #3, Pirate Planet #3

i) births and deaths

14 October 1919: birth of Shaun Sutton, BBC executive who had a key role in casting Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker.

14 October 1949: birth of Katy Manning, who played Jo Grant from 1971 to 1973, does both Jo and Iris Wildthyme for Big Finish, and reappeared in the Sarah Jane Adventures.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

14 October 1967: broadcast of third episode of The Abominable Snowmen. Khrisong decides to trust the Doctor, but the dormant Yeti is animated by the missing sphere…

14 October 1978: broadcast of third episode of The Pirate Planet. The Doctor hears the story of Queen Xanxia and sees the crushed remains of plundered planets, and is thrown off the bridge.

14 October 2018: broadcast of The Ghost Monument.

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Whoniversaries 13 October: Cyril Shaps, Ian Stuart Black, City of Death #3, Day of the Clown #2

i) births and deaths

13 October 1923: birth of Cyril Shaps, who played Viner in The Tomb of the Cybermen (1967), Lennox in The Ambassadors of Death (1970), Professor Clegg in Planet of the Spiders (1974) and the Archimandrite in The Androids of Tara (1978)

13 October 1997: death of Ian Stuart Black, author of The Savages (1966), The War Machines (1966) and The Macra Terror (1967).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

13 October 1979: broadcast of third episode of City of Death. The Doctor goes back to Leonardo’s studio; and poor old professor Kerensky meets his end.

13 October 2008: broadcast of second episode of Day of the Clown. Clyde defeats the bad guy by telling jokes, and Rani accepts Sarah’s invitation to join her team.

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Whoniversaries 12 October

i) births and deaths

12 October 1965: birth of Dan Abnett, author of among others Big Finish audios The Harvest (2004) and Nocturne (2007), Tenth Doctor audio stories The Forever Trap (2008) and The Last Voyage (2010), Torchwood audio Everyone Says Hello (2008), most of the Tenth Doctor book The Story of Martha (2008), and Torchwood novel Border Princes (2007) plus various other comics and short stories.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

12 October 1968: broadcast of episode 5 of The Mind Robber. A grand battle of fictional characters allied to either the Doctor or the Master ends with the destruction of the Land of Fiction and the restoration of the Tardis.

12 October 1987: broadcast of episode 2 of Paradise Towers. The Doctor escapes the caretakers, seeks the Great Architect and is captured by the Red Kangs; meanwhile Mel is captured by Tibby and Tabby.

12 October 1988: broadcast of episode 2 of Remembrance of the Daleks. The Doctor retrieves the Hand of Omega; Ace finds herself surrounded by Daleks.

12 October 2010: broadcast of episode 2 of The Nightmare Man (SJA). I can’t wait.

iii) dates specified in canon

12 October 1979: Beep the Meep pursues the Eighth Doctor to the BBC Television Centre in an alternate universe where they encounter an actor called Tom Baker who is starring in this show… (in “TV Action!” by Alan Barnes, published in DWM in 1999)

12 October 1998: birth of Thomas Hector Schofield, later to become known as the Seventh Doctor audio companion Hex; he shares a birthday with his creator Dan Abnett (see above).

12 October 2021: Hex’s 23rd birthday celebrations are interrupted by Cybermen in The Harvest (2004).

12 October 2025: Hex returns home in Project: Destiny (2010).

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Whoniversaries 11 October

i) births and deaths

11 October 1962: birth of Nicola Bryant, who played Peri (Perpugilliam Brown) from 1984 to 1986 and continues to appear in (and also direct) Big Finish audios.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

11 October 1975: broadcast of episode 3 of Planet of Evil. The Morestran ship cannot escape from Zeta Minor; Salamar prepares to eject the Doctor and Sarah into space…

11 October 1980: broadcast of episode 3 of Meglos. Much confusion of identity, and the Doctor is prepared for sacrifice to the Dodecahedron…

11 October 1986: broadcast of episode 2 of Mindwarp (ToaTL 6). Confusing stuff about Peri being captured by the Mentors; the Doctor thinks it is not true.

11 October 1989: broadcast of episode 2 of Ghost Light. The Doctor finds Control; Control releases Light.

11 October 2010: broadcast of episode 1 of The Nightmare Man (SJA). No summary available yet, obviously.

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Delicious LiveJournal Links for 10-11-2010

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Tumuli near Landen

I decided to try B on something a bit different on our Sunday outing today; just the other side of where she lives is a significant concentration of Gallo-Roman tumuli, and I thought it would be nice to see if I could explore them with her, armed with the GPS coordinates from Francophone Wikipedia.

Actually the first set is just this side of where she lives, just around the corner of the Church of Our Lady of the Stone: the Three Tumuli (or "Drie Tommen") of Grimde came fifth in a national TV contest for attractive archaeological monuments worth saving, and there is a ceremonial website to prove it, and a sign at the entrance to their enclosure:

At least one of these was constructed as the tomb for the second-century nobleman Marcus Probius Burrus, of whom the only thing that is known is that he was buried here. The shadows of the trees behind me make an attractive foreground to the mounds (third one dimly visible on the right):

Then I struck out east with B, towards the neighbouring town of Landen whose outskirts include no fewer than four tumuli, all of which I hoped to find. This takes us immediately through the village of Neerwinden, site of horrible battles in July 1693 and March 1793, which seems awfully bad luck.

The locals don’t seem to have made much of the historical circumstances, which I guess may be partly that it wasn’t really their war in either case; the 1693 battle was between William of Orange (recently King of England, three years after the Boyne) and the French, who beat him though Sarsfield was killed, and the 1794 battle between the French, who lost this time, and the Austrians, who won despite being numerically the smaller force.

In the 1793 battle the tumulus of nearby Middelwinden, also thought to date from the second century and excavated in 1864 and 1873, was used as both fortification and target, for obvious reasons:

B is not really one for history but did show an interest in local agriculture:

Not very much further down that road you come to the Tumulus of Pippin of Landen, who was Charlemagne’s great-grandfather apparently, set in a nice little park which we are told was the heart of the family estate:

We had actually visited here in March. Perhaps remembering the brambles, B declined to get out of the car but I got a decent enough picture of the mound itself:

Bear in mind of course the that actual mound isn’t defined by the treeline but by the earth that the trees are growing from.

Once again the little museum was closed but I got a shot through the window, here enhanced to show the foundations of the basilica of St Gertrude:

Next up was the Bortom of Walsbets, also supposedly from the second century, but used as an artillery emplacement by the Belgian army in the period between the two World Wars (for all the good it did them). I didn’t realise (due to GPS inadequacy) that there is actually a road running right past it, so took this picture from some distance away and drove on:

And turning round the next corner encountered a gathering of model aeroplane enthusiasts:

Our final stop for the day was the Plattetombe of Waasmont, which is way bigger than the others – 77 metres by 59, and 11 metres high. It has never been excavated, but I think it is significant that even today it is within a hundred metres of the provincial border between Flemish Brabant and Hainault. B condescended to walk towards it with me, and seemed to have enjoyed the outing, a pleasure in her own secret world:

And so home after a longer and more varied excursion than usual.

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October Books 4) Deceit, by Peter Darvill-Evans

Next in the New Adventures series, reuniting the Doctor and Benny with a confident and sexy Ace, for whom a couple of years have passed, and bringing in as a guest character none other than Abslom Daak, Dalek Killer, from the old Dalek annuals, along with a fake medieval planet and a pool of disembodied brains. It’s a decent novel, but is particularly interesting for the author’s afterward, where he reflects on i) writing a book in a range for which you are also the editor and ii) the reception and future of the New Adventures at that point – perhaps Virgin might start doing “Missing Adventures” featuring pre-Seventh Doctors, though Darvill-Evans was not yet convinced of this. An interesting case of a statement of intent from the person who at the time (April 1993) had the main responsibility for keeping Who going.

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Author bites back

When I read ‘s review of the recent Big Finish Companion Chrionicle starring Katy Manning as both Jo Grant and Irish Wildthyme, I thought of posting a comment on his livejournal saying that I felt he had shared, in considerable and spoiler-free detail, my own reasons for feeling that this could have been a better story – in particular, his first description of it as “a rambling, intermittently charming story” sums up my reaction to it completely.

Paul Magrs was upset by this review when he read it, and said so on Twitter, describing it as “shitty” and “miserable”. , who is probably not used to getting this from authors, has posted a dignified apology for any offence caused and presumably hopes to leave it there. I’ve never met or indeed interacted with but for what it’s worth, while I agree with his review in this case, I also agree with his praise of some of Magrs’ other work: I particularly liked his Big Finish audio The Wormery, and also recommend The Stones of Venice, Excelis Dawns, The Boy That Time Forgot, and The Zygon Who Fell To Earth. But as often as not I don’t quite click with Magrs’ work, and Find and Replace was one of those times; and I suspect that , like me, was actually more disappointed than he let on because Magrs writing Jo and Iris together seemed on the face of it like a sure winner.

Magrs may just have been in a bad mood on Friday night, or he may also feel at some level that Find and Replace is not among his best work and was upset by the review because he fears that it may be right. I think he was unwise to react as he did in what is effectively a public space (though not as unwise as, say, Rob Schneider). I suspect also that he possibly hasn’t thought through his own coping strategy for negative reviews, because one of his more embittered comments reads:

Am I alone in thinking we shouldn’t pay as much attention to reviewers who’ve never written anything themselves?

To which none other than Mark Clapham, whose work I frankly have not enjoyed as much as I have Magrs’, responded:

@paulmagrs er, yes? Some reviews are shitty, but they should still be from the readers’ perspective, not an authorial love-in.

And I think Clapham nails it. One does not need to be a carpenter to judge whether a chair is well made; one does not have to be a TV executive to decide whether or not one likes a television show; one does not need to be a writer to make informed judgements about a book. And if I think something sucks, I will normally say so, even if I risk spoiling the author’s weekend.

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Delicious LiveJournal Links for 10-10-2010

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Cutting the Northern Ireland Assembly from 108 to 75 seats

Peter Robinson’s proposal that the Northern Ireland Assembly should be cut from 108 to 75 members has run into trouble, with criticism both from the UUP and from Sinn Féin. Of course, speculation on how this might change the political landscape is premature, but that won’t stop me.

Let’s first look at what might have happened if the 2007 Assembly election had been run with five seats per constituency instead of six. Since the quota – the number of votes you need to get elected – is defined by dividing the total valid votes by one more than the number of seats, that means that the quota in each seat changes from just under 14.3% to just under 16.7%. (Though because of the effect of transfers, the real electoral threshold is considerably lower – all candidates who managed at least 9% of their constituency vote in 2007 got elected.) 

I went into this assuming that a cut in the number of seats would hit small parties worst. As I ground through the numbers, it became apparent that that is not necessarily the case, for two reasons. The first is what one might call the ‘tallest poppy’ effect.  In a constituency where one party is dominant over the others, its last seat may well be vulnerable, particularly if was rather narrowly gained – if you are defending two seats, you need transfers to take you to 33.3% instead of 28.6%; if you are defending three seats, you need 50% instead of 42.9%; if you are defending four seats, you need 66.7% instead of 57.1%; if, like Sinn Féin in West Belfast, you are defending five seats, you need 83.3% instead of 71.4%. On that basis it’s fairly clear that five-seat constituencies would indeed have penalised Sinn Féin in West Belfast, but also the DUP in East Belfast, East Londonderry, and Strangford, and the SDLP in South Belfast and Foyle.

But the more important effect is what happens to the mathematical positioning of the communal divide. In Fermanagh and South Tyrone, for instance, the total Unionist vote in 2007 was 46% – 3.22 quotas, if there are six seats – and the total Nationalist vote was 53% – 3.71 quotas. Not surprisingly, Nationalists won three seats and so did Unionists. But had there been only five seats at play, the Unionist vote would have been 2.66 quotas and the Nationalist vote 3.18 – Unionist parties as a whole (and the DUP in particular) would have lost a seat. I would therefore add Fermanagh-South Tyrone, West Tyrone and, narrowly, Newry and Armagh to the DUP’s losses (where the the DUP were the smaller Unionist party) and on the same basis would call East Antrim, North Down, Upper Bann and probably South Down as losses for the UUP. Similarly on the Nationalist side, North Belfast, North Antrim, and South Antrim would have seen the SDLP lose their seats.

There are two remaining constituencies. The situation in Lagan Valley is the only one drastically affected for this debate by the new boundaries, used for this year’s Westminster election but not for the 2007 Assembly; on the 2007 votes as cast, Alliance would probably have lost their seat, but on the new boundaries, Alliance would certainly hang on at the expense of Sinn Féin. And in Mid Ulster, where both in 2007 and in 2010 the total Unionist vote was 33% and the total Nationalist vote 66% – just under two and four quotas respectively for a five-seat constituency – it is really impossible to call which side would lose the sixth seat; it is easier to state that the loser would either be Sinn Féin, as tallest poppies, or the UUP as junior Unionist party.

I’ve also looked at the 2010 Westminster election results, where there is considerable blurring due to obvious tactical voting and withdrawal of particular parties’ candidates which presumably will not be repeated in the Assembly elections next year. The only seat where the 2010 votes give a clearly different outcome is Newry and Armagh, where a swing towards the Unionists (comparing 2010 votes with 2007) would mean the SDLP rather than the DUP losing out in a five-seat contest.

So, if the 2007 Assembly election had been run on five-seat rather than six-seat constituencies, I make the difference as follows:

DUPSFUUPSDLPAllianceOth
Seats really won in 20073628181673
Notional 5-seat constituency seats30 or 3125/26/2713 or 1410 or 116 or 73
Change-6-1/-2/-3-4 or -5-5 or -60 or -10
% seats really won in 200733.3%25.9%16.7%14.8%6.5%2.8%
% seats notionally won33.3% or 34.4%27.8%/28.9%/30.0%14.4% or 15.6%11.1% or 12.2%6.7% or 7.8%3.3%
difference0 or +1.1%+1.9%/+3.0%/+4.1%-2.2% or -1.1%-3.7% or -2.6%+0.2% or +1.3%+0.6%
This would probably have the effect, in a ten-person Executive, of the UUP losing their second minister to either Alliance or Sinn Féin.

Of course, all of this is more than a little theoretical. The votes cast in next year’s Assembly election, never mind the first election under the proposed new arrangements in 2015, will be different from those cast in 2007 or 2010. And in any case we will be in a totally different ball game with respect to the constituency boundaries; the shift from the current 18 Westminster seats to 15 is pretty certain, but any shift from six-seaters to five-seaters from the Assembly is highly theoretical, and would require at least the DUP and SF to agree on it and probably at least grudging acquiescence from the other parties. But I think the basic lines set out above – that such changes will affect either the tallest poppies, or the more vulnerable party in the smaller bloc – are sound, and so it seems to me a fair conclusion that Peter Robinson’s proposals will do the DUP no relative harm, will be bad news for the UUP and SDLP, and ironically may actually benefit Sinn Féin most.

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