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When Mr Putin Stole My Painting by Joannah Yacoub in the window of the Gordon French Gallery…

 

When Mr Putin Stole My Painting by Joannah Yacoub is displayed in the window of the Gordon French Gallery, which is featured in the book! Get your copy of the title here today.

The Secret Broker Blog Tour 2016

We’re excited to announce that The Secret Broker by Simon Crane, out 22 September, is going on a blog tour from September to October.

The Secret Broker is an adventurous new thriller and the first in a series. It tells the gripping story of Luca Voss, a suave Swiss orphan and secret broker, who has to face a cruel megalomaniac trying to manipulate the world’s superpowers from behind closed doors. This action packed thriller is an international journey of espionage and adventure, calling at Rome, Shanghai, Davos and more.

With exact dates yet to be confirmed, check out the below poster for details of where the book will be touring. The tour will consist of author Q&A’s, reviews and guest blog posts from the author himself.

 

The Secret Broker by Simon Crane

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Check out a teaser trailer here:

The Secret Broker is launching on 22 September at a special event in the Cafe Royal. You can pre-order your copy here, follow Simon Crane on Twitter @SimonCraneBooks or visit the Luca Voss website.

Naim Attallah’s interview with Brian Sewell, the art collector

Brian Sewell’s death last year at the age of 84, although not unexpected, was a sad event for most of his admirers and particularly to his few friends who knew him well and had the privilege of seeing his sentimental side at close quarters.

Brian Sewell

In 2000, Naim Attallah, Chairman of Quartet Books, had the privileged to interview Brian Sewell for his book Dialogues. Sewell garnered his tremendous knowledge of art from studying at the Courtauld but was apparently frustrated in his ambitions to become a painter. In the ’50s and ’60s he worked at Christies where his own art collection, valued at 2 million pounds, will be sold. His former colleague Noel Annesley, now the auction house’s honorary chairman, said the range of works would surprise people who assumed Sewell, famous for his scathing opinions of modern art, had rather narrow tastes.

‘Brian could be quite brutal in his assessment but he also had a kindly and appreciative side that would be expressed in his collecting patterns as well,’ said Mr Annesley. ‘I was certainly surprised by the sheer volume of the collection. Perhaps the emphasis on modern British or twentieth century British art is heavier than expected, but on the other hand Brian himself tried quite hard to be a painter and never quite gave up on it and you can see he would be fascinated by what his contemporaries and immediate predecessors were up to.’

The sale, called Brian Sewell: Critic and Collector, is being held next month and includes three works by 17th century Dutch painter Matthias Stomer, valued at about £1 million all together. Sewell’s twentieth century collection includes a nude by the Bloomsbury Group’s Duncan Grant, valued between 20 and 30 thousand pounds, and a 1946 portrait of Lucian Freud by his friend John Craxton worth £30,000.

Experts preparing the sale have managed to identify some of the artists behind the works for the first time, confirming the eye for art that made Sewell such an authority. One work, previously identified as being a follower of Michelangelo, has been attributed to the 16th century Italian painter Daniele da Volterra, valued at £150,000. Mr Annesley said: ‘People will be fascinated by the chance of owning something Brian liked, because people read what he said.’

For the last five years of his life Quartet became the proud publisher of his books, which include:
Naim Attallah’s full blog here. 

Young Hitler, a non-fiction novel by Claus Hant

Adolf Hitler, the notorious dictator, responsible for the deaths of millions of people, is seen in rare footage discovered in Germany, dining with friends and playing with children. Two rolls of 16mm silent film in rusty cans were found in the attic of the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, which had become a place of pilgrimage for the opera-obsessed Fuhrer during his 12 years as ruler of the Third Reich. The films, one of them 4 minutes long, the other, little less than 11 minutes, were shot in 1936 by a 16 year-old Wolfgang Wagner, a grandson of Richard Wagner. They show Hitler in a series of informal settings with the Wagner family.

A young hitlerThe footage has excited researchers who say that it adds another dimension to Hitler, one that seems to humanise the monster, responsible for the Holocaust and perhaps the world’s most destructive war. Sylvia Krauss, director of the Bavarian State Archive and supervisor of the estate of Wolfgang Wagner, who died in 2010, discovered the films in December. ‘One views the scenes with a certain anxiety,’ she said. ‘You can see Hitler in completely unknown poses. Not the statesman Hitler we know but one where he comes across in a very friendly way.’

Hitler was obsessed with Wagner’s music and befriended the Wagner family early in his political career. The Wagner children would come to call him ‘Uncle Wolf’, Wolf being a nickname allowed only to the closest of the Nazi inner circle. The films were shot three years after Hitler assumed power. He was childless throughout his life and the Wagner children were surrogates for him. He can be seen playing and joking with them at the Villa Wahnfried, the family residence in Bayreuth, The footage also shows Hitler sketching Weiland Wagner, Wolfgang’s brother, who died in 1966.

‘That these children were surrogates, we have known for a long time but these films bring that to life,’ Miss Krauss said. ‘Winifried Wagner, Wolfgang’s mother is seen in conversation with Hitler. She holds Hitler’s hand, she is beaming. Other friends of the Wagner family featured includes the conductors Heinz Tiedjen and Wilhelm Furtwangler. Hitler’s favourite architect Albert Speer is captured with the clan enjoying a dinner after a festival performance.’

It’s worthy of note that Furtwangler was the subject of a book published by Quartet. Quartet published in 2010 an unusual and engrossing account of Hitler’s rise to power, written in novel form by one of Germany’s leading television directors: Young Hitler by Claus Hant. 150 pages of intriguing appendices substantiate the novel’s provenance amongst the ashes of a demoralised and bankrupt Germany, Young Hitler also provides a unique perspective, but unlike the film archive, is available here. 
Read about what our Chairman, Naim Attallah has to say about the book here. 

Teaser trailer for Simon Crane’s new thriller ‘the secret broker’

The Secret Broker, due to launch 22 September, is an adventurous new thriller and first in a series. It tells the gripping story of Luca Voss, a suave Swiss orphan and secret broker, who has to face a cruel megalomaniac trying to manipulate the world’s superpowers from behind closed doors.  This action packed thriller is an international journey of espionage and adventure, calling at Rome, Shanghai, Davos and more.

Simon Crane has been an entrepreneur, financier and writer for more than thirty years, working in Tokyo, New York, Sydney, Singapore and Hong Kong. Regularly sought out by government leaders, policy makers the world’s largest organisations for guidance on crisis control, he has had unmitigated access to some of the most powerful people on the planet and first-hand insights into the secret deals between government and businesses.

The oldie reviews ‘VICTOR GRAYSON: THE MAN AND THE MYSTERY’

Another great review for Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery, this time from Jane Ridley of The Oldie:

Victor Grayson was a minor hero of the early Labour party. At the age of 39 he disappeared and was never seen again. David Clark, his biographer, is a Labour politician who once sat for Colne Valley, the same constituency as Grayson. He first published a biography of Grayson back in 1985. Since then Clark has done a lot of sleuthing and turned up new information about the missing years of Grayson’s life. The result is a thriller. I read it straight through in four hours in a single afternoon.

 

Victor Grayson shot to fame aged 26 when he won the 1907 Colne Valley by-election for Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery by David ClarkLabour. A clever working-class boy who grew up in the Manchester slums, Grayson trained to be a Unitarian minister, but when he discovered socialism he chucked religion. He was an electrifying speaker and his campaign speeches, delivered in a raw, rough voice, standing on a cart, thrilled huge crowds in the poor mill villages of Colne Valley. Grayson wanted a Labour Party that stood for socialism independent of the trade unions, and this issue – still unresolved by the Labour Party today – got him into trouble with the party bosses from the start. He was a rock-star orator, returning from his gigs drenched in sweat, but he had no talent for detail or party management. At Westminster he made a couple of dramatic interventions, calling his Labour colleagues class traitors, and he was sacked by the party. After he lost his seat in the January 1910 election he was finished as a Labour MP.

 

One day in September 1920 Grayson walked out of his flat and vanished for ever. Clark has discovered that Grayson left home carrying two large suitcases containing most of his possessions. This makes it unlikely that he was murdered, and it also knocks out the theory that he went mad or had a breakdown. Clark conjectures that Grayson changed his identity and lived on until around 1940. Stranger still, it seems that Grayson was the illegitimate son of an aristocratic family. His mother had worked as a servant in a grand house in Ireland, and Clark believes that she was paid to bring up the child. So who was Victor Grayson’s real father? Putting together the clues, Clark suggests that Grayson’s real father was the dissipated 8th Duke of Marlborough, the older brother of Lord Randolph Churchill. In other words, Victor Grayson was the first cousin of Winston Churchill. Whether this is true I have no idea. But it certainly makes a ripping story.

Read the full article here and buy your copy from Quartet Books, Amazon or bookstores throughout the country.

‘Hungry for Love’ reviewed by Portobello Book Blog

 Hungry for Love by Lucy Beresford has received another scrumptious review, this time from Portobello Book Blog:

Hungry For Love was a much more serious read that its cover perhaps suggests. With apologies to the cover designer, I’m not sure I would have picked this up based on the cover and that would have been a shame because I thoroughly enjoyed it. Hungry for Love by Lucy Beresford

 

You shouldn’t read this book if you are feeling at all hungry as the descriptions of baking and cooking will have your mouth watering. The culinary imagery continues too into the lives of the characters.  “He wants to hug her, for this deep connection they share about the importance of cake, this burnished way of seeing the world. Hug her or even eat her, if only the connotations weren’t so sleazy. Jax is too pure for that.” 

 

To continue the food metaphors, this is a treat of a read, very satisfying. It shows our heroine Jax begin to rediscover herself and strengthen her family bonds while also developing a love and appreciation for cooking. It has the reader wondering which of the delectable men, if any, might be her perfect recipe for love. The only thing it is lacking is a full recipe for the chocolate velvet cupcakes which Dan creates. They sounded to-die-for!

Read the full review here and get your copy of Hungry for Love now from Amazon or Quartet Books!

Bookmunch Reviews ‘Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery’

Thom Cuell, writer for the insightful blog Bookmunch, has given an in-depth review of David Clark’s reissue, Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery:

 

 

A rebel MP, regarded as a wildcard by the Parliamentary Labour Party but capable of generating mass support through a busy schedule of rallies, whose election convinced conservative newspapers that a ‘red graysonrevolution’ was coming. If only there was some contemporary parallel for the story of Victor Grayson.

 

Grayson is a legendary figure within the Labour party; ‘a rare political phenomenon who has developed into something of an icon over the years’ despite ‘just one election victory’ and ‘an inauspicious parliamentary career’, a great orator who left an indelible mark on his Northern constituents and caused a scandal with his behaviour in the House of Commons, before breaking with the labour movement over his belligerent pro-War stance in 1914.

 

His mystique is heightened by the circumstances of his disappearance. In late September 1920, Grayson walked out of his home in the company of two men, telling the manageress (with whom he was close) ‘I’ll be back in touch with you’. There were unconfirmed sightings in the UK, Europe and Australia in the decades which followed, before the trail ran cold in 1942.

 

David Clark, a former MP who had represented Grayson’s own constituency of Colne Valley, published his biography Labour’s Lost Leader in 1985. The Man and the Mystery builds on this work, adding interviews and discoveries made in the intervening years to offer a new theory of Grayson’s disappearance.

 

Grayson’s story is a fascinating one, and Clark has likely produced the definitive account (at least, barring any revelations in the MI5 files). While there are passages where the book is bogged down in the minutiae of backroom political machinations, this is by and large a lively and passionate telling of the life.

Read the full article here and buy your copy from Quartet Books, Amazon or bookstores throughout the country.

The Huddersfield Examiner reviews ‘Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery’

Paul Routledge, features correspondent for the Huddersfield Examiner, has reviewed the captivating Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery by David Clark, released on 15 June this summer. Read his article below:

It was his big chance, and the self-styled people’s hero of Colne Valley seized it with both hands.

grayson
The date was December 16, 1905, the place was Huddersfield Town Hall and this was the first time curious local voters had clapped eyes on Victor Grayson. He gave a dazzling performance that put him on the road to Westminster.

 
They weren’t going to forget him in a hurry, and his name still reverberates down the decades as the man who left behind the biggest political mystery of his time. It involves high society, the Great War, the sale of honours, the Churchill family and stories of illegitimate sons of aristocracy farmed out to the poor.

 
One Saturday night in late September 1920, he disappeared. He left his mansion block with two men, loaded down with two suitcases containing his entire possessions. He was never seen again – or, at any rate, he never showed his face in public again. He was widely assumed to be dead but David Clark produces evidence that he was given a new identity and bankrolled to go into hiding, probably to protect the reputation of someone rich and famous. But who?

 
Clark deduces that Grayson’s father was an aristocrat, and suggests that he was probably the immoral eighth Duke of Marlborough, George Spencer Churchill, uncle of Winston Churchill. Grayson had the look of young Churchill about him, and shared his fondness for the good life, high society and drink. They were acquainted, and were both famous orators.
They could have been related. Who knows?

Victor Grayson: The Man and the Mystery is available from Quartet Books, Amazon and bookshops throughout the UK.

Lucy Beresford interviewed by the Romantic Novelists’ Association

Read Lucy Beresford’s interview with Ellie Holmes from the Romantic Novelists’ Association Blog, in which she discusses her latest book Hungry for Love and life as a writer, therapist and Agony Aunt with her trademark charm:

Hungry for Love has been described as “an amusing, fun read” but it deals with some serious issues such as self respect. How difficult was it to get across a serious message in a lighthearted book?

I thought it was going to be quite tricky, as I’d long wanted this to be the corner-stone of this novel, as I believe that it’s crucial for how we live in the world. But I also wanted to write about food and romance and have a lot of fun with that, so in the end the writing of this novel flowed really easily.

 

Lucy on cushions

You are a trained psychotherapist. As a result of your experience in this area do you create your characters from the inside out and then develop a plot?

I think they go hand in hand – the type of characters they are always drives the plot in certain way, so I’m a great believer in creating strong, believable characters and then seeing where they want to go.

 

 

Cooking features a lot in Hungry for Love. Who would be your fantasy dinner guests and what would you cook?

I’d invite Shakespeare (because I have so many questions to ask him), Daniel Craig, Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan and Nigella Lawson. She and I would share the cooking and rustle up a world feast of guacamole, risottos, curries and pavlova.

 

One of your previous roles was as an Agony Aunt.  Have you ever failed to follow your own good advice?

Lots of times. As an outsider you can often see someone else’s situation more clearly but when it’s your own issues, it feels impossible to untangle them – but at least that helps me empathise with the struggles other people have: things might look easy on the outside but inside the emotions are complex.

 

Read the full interview here and get your copy of Hungry for Love now from Amazon or Quartet Books!

Colin Spencer’s ‘Spitting Image’ to be staged at the King’s Head Theatre

Colin Spencer’s play Spitting Image, last performed 58 years ago, is to be staged at the King’s Head Theatre, London, from 5 August until the 27 August. The play tells to story of Gary and Tom, Backing into Light by Colin Spencerlong-term lovers who are having a baby, set in 1960’s London. The play was undoubtedly one of the UK’s first openly gay plays, and was first staged in 1968 to critical acclaim. Spitting Image now reimagines Colin Spencer’s uproarious satire of bigotry and biology for a whole new generation.

In an exclusive interview with The Independent, Spencer comments: ‘It is undoubtedly the first openly gay play but it was never published because homophobia was still rife,..it wasn’t even possible for amateur groups to do it over the years.’ He also goes on to say how surprised he is that Spitting Image is still as relevant today as it was then. The play, as well as many of his writings and musings, is a very personal story to Spencer, as he was denied access to his young son after his first marriage broke down and faced hostility in a 1960s court system which viewed homosexuals as degenerates.

Spencer is the author of Backing into Light: My Father’s Son, the first volume of his memoir, and is a stunning account of art school life in 1950s Brighton and London’s literary Bohemia of the Swinging Sixties. Best remembered now perhaps as a food writer, his column was published for fourteen years in the Guardian and his epic British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History reissued in 2011.

 

Former Pakistan PM Shaukat Aziz interviewed on Economy, Trade, Terrorism

Bloomberg have interviewed former Pakistan Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz about Pakistan’s economy, trade with India and terrorism. He’s interviewed by Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat on “Trending Business.”

Watch the interview here. 

Read Shaukat Aziz’s From Banking to the Thorny World of Politics, with Anna Mikhailova here.

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