Category Archives: Adult Fiction

PHOENIX ARK PRESS RELEASE

Phoenix Ark Press are delighted to present the long-awaited arrival of award winner David Clement-Davies to the realms of adult fiction, with a rich literary vampire novel called The Blood Garden, written under the adult fiction pen name of David C Davies.

Set in modern Covent Garden, both the place and among the blood-red folds of the famous Royal Opera House and The Royal Ballet, in an environment echoing films like Dark Swan, it pits the mysterious and charismatic American actor Paul Romantin, against a disillusioned London detective, Adam First. In a partly epistolary novel about love, sex, death, art and murder, it is a remarkable and dark love story, to rival the likes of Eliabeth Kostova’s The Historian, or Bram Stoker’s classic Dracula. Talking of Bram Stoker, he may make a stagey appearance too, and in what is both a time-slip vampire story and also a realistic crime novel, so too may the likes of the blood-soaked figure of Jack the Ripper. Hold on to your plush red seats and watch the curtain rise on brilliant and moving drama.

‘David C Davies may have invented an entirely original genre. The vampire detective novel, with London itself as a main character.’ Mike Jones – Bloomsbury

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Thrillers

PHOENIX ARK PRESS RELEASE

Phoenix Ark Press are delighted to announce the publication of Ice the first novel by the historical crime writer Dominic Sands, under our adult Thumbmarks Imprint and exclusively to Kindle, available at Amazon. Ice is an extraordinary little novel, beginning in the year of 1632, when the peasants go into the high mountains above Rome, to gather ice for the Prince’s miraculous new work of art and science; an Ice House. So begins the strange testament of Michele Pisiano and the story of his obsession with Lorenzo Barberini, in a tale of love, art, murder, witchcraft, faith, male pain and a dark secret at the very heart of the Ice House itself. The Phoenix founder believes it has a touch of John Fowles’ The Magus.

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, The Arts, Thrillers

PROFILING ANTHONY GARDNER

Anthony Gardner is an Irish author and journalist based in London. He edits the Royal Society of Literature’s magazine RSL, is a Fellow of the Society, and writes for a variety of newspapers and magazines, including the Daily Telegraph and the Sunday Times Magazine. The Rivers of Heaven is his first novel and published by Starhaven. He is also founder of http://www.tomorrowsbooks.com.

For Anthony’s website click

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Books, Publishing

PROFILING SAUL DAVID

Saul is the author of several critically acclaimed history books including The Indian Mutiny: 1857 (shortlisted for the Westminster Medal for Military Literature), Zulu: the Heroism and Tragedy of the Zulu War of 1879 (a Waterstone’s Military History Book of the Year) and, most recently, Victoria’s Wars: The Rise of Empire. His latest work of history – Soldiers: The Redcoat from the Glorious Revolution to Waterloo – will be published by Penguin in February 2012. Saul is professor of War Studies at the University of Buckingham, and Programme Director for Buckingham’s London based MA in Military History.

An experienced broadcaster, Saul has appeared in history programmes for all major TV channels and is a regular on Radio 4. He has also written two historical novels, set during the wars of the late Victorian period and featuring the Anglo-African soldier George Hart. The first, Zulu Hart, was published last year. Praised by Bernard Cornwell, it was chosen as Waterstone’s New Talent in Fiction title, and reached number 4 in the Daily Telegraph hardback fiction bestsellers. The follow up, Hart of Empire, will be published on August 5.

For reviews and Saul’s website click HERE

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Books, Culture, The Arts

Sherlock Holmes, security, disclaimers, Ra Ra Rasputin, and releasing the Phoenix Files!

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination, or used fictitiously…” Every novelist knows that is the legal disclaimer that appears in the front of any published novel, and every movie lover will have seen something similar tagged to a film. But where does it actually come from?

Phoenix’s boss found out last year, when researching a private biography in the Paris National Archive. Those files had been kept closed under the seventy year rule, probably similar in time-period to the valuable protection of authorial copyright, namely a normal lifetime’s distance after an author’s death, and included a police dossier on the arrest of Adrian Conan Doyle, the rather dissolute son of Sir Arthur, creator of the great detective himself, Sherlock Holmes. Adrian and his brother, in very Sherlock Holmes vein, had been arrested at Bolougne-Sur-Mer in the 1930’s, for trying to smuggle weapons through customs, onto a Packet Boat. They would not have had a chance in today’s high security climate, because both were carrying sword sticks, of all swashbuckling things, revolvers, and several boxes of ammunition. 21 and 19 years old respectively, they were questioned, fined and released, though according to his biographer, Adrian would later develop an obsession with weapons, and Medieval torture instruments. Among some fascinating ‘secret’ records though, was another dossier on Prince Yusupov.

It was of course Felix Yusupov who was responsible for the origins of the above disclaimer, certainly in movie theatres, after he sued MGM, for its portrayal of him in the 1932 film ‘Rasputin and the Empress’, and their dramatisation of his involvement in Rasputin’s murder. He won the case, for libel and invasion of privacy, not over the murder, but for the fact the film had suggested Rasputin had seduced his wife, Princess Irina Alexandrova. One of the richest men in Russia, who fled to Europe after the Revolution, Yusupov founded a fashion house with her, and made rather a career out of suing people. He had already gone head to head with Karensky in London, who founded the exile newspaper, The Days, and specialised in attacks on ‘White Russian’ aristocrats like Yusupov. But the file we found was itself a little gem of mis-sleuthing, and historical translation. It involved their investigating an attempt to blackmail the Prince over a homosexual affair with the son of a French Count. Among decidedly loaded police remarks about Yusupov’s femininity, and fondness for the company of young men, it reveals the French police paid a ‘snitch’ to root through Yusupov’s clothes, left at his tailor, where they found a little parcel of cocaine in his pocket. Fictional Holmes would have loved such 1% solutions, because although Yusupov is said to have boasted on the boat leaving Russia, that he had murdered Rasputin, the language of all those police files so exposes the official prejudices of the time. Also the language of professional sleuthing emerging everywhere, which, with relatively new forensic techniques like Finger Printing, began to transform the landscape of investigations, and moved it out of the romantic domain of the ‘spy’ – there were several notes in those files scrawled on restaurant napkins – into the territory of the official policeman. In Conan Doyle’s take, who at been dead for eight months when his sons were arrested, often the territory of the bumbling Lestrade. Incidentally, after fighting battles against real injustice, Sir Arthur’s famous last words must have been some of the greatest of all time, to his second wife – ‘You are wonderful.’

It was one of many fascinating things that turned up, although supposedly not of interest to today’s serious, or even scandal hungry newspapers, and so the general public, (we tried), so over the next few weeks, that and other little discoveries will be added to our own blogged ‘Phoenix files’. Phoenix puts no such disclaimer in front of its blog, we’d rather the tag ‘this is a true, or based on a true story’. We naturally coda it to ‘excerpts’, and in the books we are trying to produce, when of course they are fictional. DCD

If you enjoyed this article you can donate to building a little writer’s publisher:

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Publishing, Stories

PHOENIX PROUDLY PRESENTS ITS EBOOK CATALOGUE

1 Comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Childrens Books, Fantasy, Phoenix Catalogue

PHOENIX PROUDLY PRESENTS ITS THUMBMARKS CATALOGUE

Books are not yet available for order

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Fantasy, Phoenix Catalogue, Thrillers

PHOENIX PROUDLY PRESENTS ITS THUMBMARKS CATALOGUE

Books are not yet available for order

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Phoenix Catalogue, Thrillers

THUMBMARKS ADULT IMPRINT

Phoenix Ark proudly present the ThumbMarks logo

1 Comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, Thrillers

Adult Readers at Phoenix – Imprint Logo

Phoenix, committed to building a publisher with reader’s involment, would love any thoughts, criticisms and suggestions on the adult imprint logo.

Leave a comment

Filed under Adult Fiction, The Phoenix Story