Category Archives: Uncategorized

A READER’S QUESTION – FROM TIFFANY

Is Scream still on release for August 1 2012?
Don’t ever forget that you are awesome story teller. The Sight was like watching a movie for me when I first read it.
Your imagination with Polar Bears? Can’t wait. Saw your preview for it once on this site and it was wonderful.

How nice people are, especially young people, compared to cynical adults, who talk love, friendship or literature at the heart of publishers. I’m afraid not August, Tiffany, as blogged recently, The Terror Time Spies have to come first, but this year.

DCD

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

TARA BREAK AND ABRAM’S SILENCE SPEAKS VOLUMES

After threatening a blog, out of a year and more threatening their own author under contract, Abram’s silence speaks volumes. It is the principle that senior editor, Tara Break, had not only personal responsibilities, which she might abandon or abuse as she pleases in private life, so obsessed with her ‘rights’ but no one else’s, but a professional duty of care too, in a tiny department, that she completely jettisoned in an act of massive disrespect, negligence and ultimate cruelty too. Of course she had professional responsibility there, but is never one to take any true responsibility, and would naturally hide behind a firm, or a group and watch the destruction of David Clement-Davies’s work and career, actually his life, but also the removal of her boss Harold Rove too. Lovely. She uses words like evil, heard by David’s own editor too, new Vice President, who did nothing to solve or aid a difficult situation either, suddenly making everything about her ‘power over her list’, but both might take a look in the mirror.

While Abram’s utterly dishonest synthesising issues around Tara Break, privacies or whatever, really masks the conflicts the story then became about, like author’s rights, contracts, broken professional promises, professional defamation, above all honesty and proper and essential working conditions under contract, they are also wrong about the principle of duties of care, well before that. Not to mention the growing anguish that was known about in a department, that went silent to an author with two books there, and three under contract. If the issue of Hew, Screw and Glue is not technically the big one, though it led to the disaster, because a personal fact of friendship and awful betrayal was so involved, so hypocritically too, then the difficulty of Tara Break’s lack of priorities on tour was, and a weird psychology and family history too. An ultimate arrogance and unilateralism that are astonishing. Susan Van Metre’s threats months before were, and her breach of a writer’s privacy to Penguin editor Sharyn November very much was. So was the personal alliance between Sarah Van More, Tara Break and her new man, as the distortion of the whys and how’s for months was, where in an ‘enquiry’ Tara Break and her colleagues did not even mention the Hew, Screw and Glue issue. But above all the conspiracy inside a department for months was too, that should be considered not only arrogant, abusive and horrible, but illegal. The personal and professional invasion of it was appalling and it completely distorted all supposed discussions about books, or how you get to them. As we have said, so much is proved by the removal of Harold Rove, but Abrams CEO Mike Jacobson will do nothing about it, because he got his scapegoats, after his bogus ‘enquiry’. There was no ‘due process’ at all. Love has not been talked about enough, which out of Fell was almost impossible to bear, in shattered relationships and friendships, but it went beyond a person, it went into what supports literature itself. Hence attempts to bring peace, repeatedly denied too. “You mention contracts and you will destroy trust” said ‘agent’ Ginger Clarke, but Tara Break destroyed trust, then Sarah Van More. Then the bully tactics of a whole New York firm engaged, and denial of true freedom of speech or defence.

They cannot attack in court because they know they will lose, and it would open the door to so much that was wrong, but they will not apologise or compensate, because they do not give a tuppeny damn about real lives or books, careers beyond their own, or the harm Tara Break and they did and stood over so awfully. So unnecessarily too. Sadly we cannot afford to fight them in court and memory is a real enemy. They also know about these open ‘slanders’, as they would have it, in a blog, because an Oxford lawyer put himself on our ‘mailing list’. Very well, knowing about a thing but not acting is also a form of acceptance but Americans are getting a rather bad reputation in the just power stakes. There, Abrams and the complete expression of ‘power’ without real responsibility, contractual abuse, and a chain of secrets and lies that also saw a major publishing CEO trying to defame someone to the US Author’s Guild, as they had shut the door on their legal and contractual duty to give dialogue on two books already there. Welcome too to Sarah Van More’s real standards in getting to the top, a person who used The Sight in her interview with Harold Rove, but be very careful of love, friendship and literature in New York City. Abrams certainly don’t believe in such things and have stained a company’s reputation too. Perhaps Tara Break should remodel the Statue of Liberty, but she prefers corrupt politics and any possible harm ‘out there’, even to people she said she loved and asked friendship of. It is actually the meaning of tragedy.

PA PRESS

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

GARETH JONES, SPIES AND JACK HEINZ

Fascinating programme on BBC 4 about the eventually murdered journalist Gareth Jones, Stalin, Hitler and America. What we noted was his journey to Russia, with the US baked bean magnet, Jack Heinz. There to record, as an intimate of Lloyd George’s, Stalin’s murderous famine. How, as the wind of opinion, from Randolph Hurst to a major New York Times journalist, turned towards some kind of support of Hitler and the Nazis, against Soviet Russia, but honest journalists like Jones were squashed in the middle, dropped by Lloyd George and branded a spy in Russia and persona non grata. “Both Communism and Fascism in those days were peddling lies on a grand scale“.

It links to the article here about Drue Heinz, who married Jack Heinz. The Heinz family’s link to Nazi support ring as loudly as Republican ambivalence about Hitler, or Hurst’s turning against Roosevelt and his New Deal. But evidence from Switzerland suggests Drue Heinz, the great Manhattan socialite and arts patron, publisher of The Paris Review, was some kind of spy in Switzerland until 1944, linked to the American legation and the OSS, where Alan Dulles, later CIA Director, cut his teeth. In that smoke and mirror spy world she also has links to Hertford College Oxford. The Dulles clan can hardly be seen as easy Nazi supporters, yet so much of CIA dubiousness comes out of Switzerland, and the shifting winds of war too, as the Second War turned towards the Cold War. That house in Switzerland though is astonishing in its links to aristocratic European families, to the Agnellis, the fifties designer Emilio Pucci, and to Mussolini’s daughter Eda.

PA PRESS

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

LONDON OLYMPICS, THE BRITISH MUSEUM AND THE AMERICAN DREAM

The London Olympics, whether a success or wash out, are actually a wonderful chance for many valuable discussions and cultural discoveries. One, for American and world visitors alike, is the coming mega exhibition at the British Museum on Elizabethan London and all its writers, Shakespeare: Staging the World, from July 19th through to November. Another are the cycle of Shakespeare plays being staged at The Globe, in 37 different languages, but then, supported by a Bardic fest on the BBC, this is also World Shakespeare Year: A Cultural Olympiad too then, with Bill going for cultural Gold.

It is a chance for an obvious plug for work here, and the experimental posting of the story of Shakespeare’s Brother, above, on Southwark and William’s unknown younger brother Edmund, also a player, who died in Southwark in the freezing winter of 1607/8. It might be a chance to stop Thames Water mutilating an important and wonderful London district too, as the actor Patrick Stewart has been campaigning on, with its plans for awful new water tunnels, to quench the washed and unwashed in the capital, in the glinting shadow of the Shard. Southwark must be preserved, or protected, but perhaps not in that ‘theme park’ way we do history nowadays. But actually the story of the players, Southwark, The City and the Reformation lies at the very root of World banking and economic discussions too, ever looming over the City of London.

For years we have talked about that “American Dream“, good or bad, dream or nightmare, but it actually came straight out of the Elizabethan City of London, and speaks of a very long ‘special relationship’. In the establishing of the Virginia Trading Company’s Free Standing Lotterie in 1612, taken up by all 13 colonies and formed in the City of London, in the founding of the East India Company too, so much of what we believe and debate today was forged five hundred years ago, in the trading ethic of the City, the battle with Rome and Euro Centrism, and the discovery and colonisation of the ‘New World’. As those writers and players, vagabond or connected, were writing their works and building their theatres, often attacked by the City Corporation, in the hungry “Square mile”. Just as the violent religious debates of the Reformation, subtly redirected in Shakespeare, and the energetic freedoms of separatist Puritans and dissenters, were carried straight to the founding heart of often still Puritan America, or East Coast America, with the actually levelling idea of Lotteries and Capitalism powerfully in toe – levelling until capital became such an unlevel playing field. It may be why there is such interest in Shakespeare and Southwark from American academics nowadays, but in many ways American consciousness has not moved on from those Elizabethan London arguments and energetic opposites, four hundred years ago. Maybe the UK is always returning to them too, especially in its symbiotic or lap dog relationship with the USA.

Perhaps the Olympics then are a chance to discuss what Shakespeare’s real vision and journey was, and if that can be a true guiding light once more, or if it is all just fustian recreation. Peter Ackroyd argues he did not have a meaning or vision, as such, since he was both a writer trying to make it, and please an audience, and all-encompassing in his mirror up to nature, or the world. Yet, if “we all such stuff as dreams are made of”, perhaps the good or bad life dream does revolve around that play Ackroyd does not think was effectively his last work, and we do, The Tempest. Especially what Shakespeare was trying to get at in terms of the creative ‘faith’ of the writer magician, Prospero, in that ‘isle full of noises’ of his mind, and those “brave new worlds that hath such people in it.” Much as Ackroyd may be right about some quality in Shakespeare drawing on “The English Imagination”, that is a world vision, for all humanity, not a London one, and a search for other ‘countries’, or reality and imagination, beyond the clashes of his time. Whatever golds the Olympics bring for Team Britain though, now branded just like the Corporation or ‘Big Apple’ New York City, there is a lot of cultural gold to be had in London this year. Enjoy.

Phoenix Ark Press

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

WELCOME TO THE MAYAN END OF EVERYTHING!

Phoenix Ark Press are delighted to share an article by David Clement-Davies on the Mayan Calendar in The Weissman Report Click Here

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

THE GODHEAD GAME AVAILABLE FOR FREE DOWNLOAD ON THE 4TH OF JULY

Click on the Screen Arrow to play the ‘Book Trailer’, a new concept to beat Hollywood too!

Also available on Utube at http://youtu.be/Z62x9mzO5NA

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

PATRONAGE AND PHOENIX ARK PRESS!

Another ‘incidentally’ – if any mad, wandering billionaire feels like swooping in and backing Phoenix Ark Press, or funding a legal campaign for redress against nasty New York Abrams, you’re very welcome. We’re tired of so much work without earning a living, publishing is a collapsing sink pit of cynicism, and we need a holiday. If ‘free enterprise’ has replaced the structures of state support, while the rich and replete swan off to Davos, to talk rubbish about the ever-widening gap, perhaps we need to bring back the likes of the Earl of Southampton, and modern patronage without the patronising!

Nobody but a fool wrote for anything but money” Dr Johnson

Phoenix Ark Press

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

LONDON OLYMPICS, WIMBLEDON, FOOTBALL AND A FREE THRILLER

The Godhead Game will now be available for free wireless download on sunday July 1st and wednesday 4th of July. Click here

Also available on Utube at http://youtu.be/Z62x9mzO5NA

Available from Amazon.com

1 Comment

Filed under Thrillers, Uncategorized

A GAME OF SECRETS, A HUNT FOR SKULLS, A BATTLE OF SPIES

In responding to searches on Phoenix Ark’s website, we have noted interest in the article on Drue Heinz and the CIA. The story of Allen Dulles features prominently in the new thriller The Godhead Game by David Clement-Davies, A Game of Secrets, A Hunt for Skulls, A Battle of Spies, available as an eBook via Amazon.com, but here is some of the factual research that helped to inform the story. Drue Heinz was one of Manhattan’s grandest dames for many years and a massive supporter of the arts, but sadly not Phoenix Ark Press. On the other hand, we have never asked!

FROM THE PHOENIX ARK FILES:

It turned up in a World War II visitor’s book, from an aristocratic home, on a hill in Switzerland, with sweeping views to Mont Blanc. There a glamorous American heiress, and a Swiss Baron, banker, and notable art collector, lived out the war in grand style, and with a considerable taste for adventure. Among their more permanent guests was the painter Balthus. They were also intimately connected with a celebrated spy – Allen Dulles – first Civilian Director of the CIA. The hostess of the house would help Dulles retrieve the Ciano diaries from Mussolini’s favourite daughter, Edda. As part of an American East Coast elite, she was at least an informal agent for the OSS, forerunner to the CIA, the Office of Strategic Services. As for Dulles, still said to be a romantic hero at the Agency, and a committed lady’s man, the be-spectacled, swashbuckling, but famously discrete lawyer had crossed into Switzerland, via Lisbon and Spain, as the borders slammed shut on the eve of Operation Torch, the allied invasion of North Africa. He was armed with a banker’s draft for a million dollars, and a virtually free hand, as Berne OSS station chief. That he cherished, and fully exploited, culminating in his work over Operation Sunrise, for German surrender in Northern Italy. His all important Swiss escapade is touched on, fictionalised, but largely avoided, in the film The Good Shepherd, starring Matt Damon. Dulles certainly believed in something that seems to have gone into decline, operatives fully enagaged on the ground, and culturally educated and well informed, rather than doing much second hand, perhaps nowadays down the net. He once famously said that all you really need in life is ‘a little bit of courage’.

Dulles had worked for the State Department, became a lawyer with Cromwell and Sullivan, and was a member of Yale’s infamous Skull and Bones Society, initiate to Presidents and security gurus, alike. In Switzerland he set about building a spy network that saw his intelligence gathering reach Roosevelt’s own desk. Since he had turned Lenin from the American Legation door in Switzerland, in 1918, he would never make the same mistake again, and worked with many. He also contacted every American living there, to ask for help, in what he described to Washington as a ‘somewhat distorted world’. It was the kind of world where agents still wore red carnations, or proffered a pack of Camel cigarettes, rather than Gauloise, to establish their allegiance to Free France, or Vichy. One that saw the British and Americans in touch with Admiral Canaris, employer and lover of Mata Hari, as head of the Abwehr, German Military Intelligence. Until Canaris fell, after the attempt to assassinate Hitler, and the Abwehr were abolished. Canaris was effectively replaced by Walter Schellenberg, who mounted two machine guns on his desk in Berlin, and later settled in Switzerland to write The Labyrinth. One of Allen Dulles’s greatest coups though was securing the help of the heroic Fritz Kolbe, who the British had turned away from ‘the shop’, and whose reports were validated in London by none other than Kim Philby, already working for the Soviets. Actually Dulles was too acute to sign his name in a visitor’s book, although his daughter Joan, and troubled wife Clover Todd, both appear in 1944. As does a patient of the psychologist Carl Jung, who, though he never came to the house, Dulles also consulted in Germany, and had his own OSS code number. There too came Dulles’s station replacement in Berne, Robert P. Joyce, and General Barnwell Legge, American Legation secretary. Legge was heavily criticized in a recent military controversy on the internet, for his involvement in preventing downed American airmen escape, under threat of Court Martial, probably because Dulles did not want their Swiss operation compromised. Also for failing to correct conditions at the scandalous camp at Wilmeroose, although one subordinate called him a caring man.

In a very ‘Special Relationship’, British Intelligence were at the house too, many times. In the person of George Younghusband, military number two at the British Legation, and the Colditz escapee Pat Reid, famous for his escape-themed board game, and for so successfully telling The Colditz Story, after the war. Reid never wrote about his time in Switzerland though. More specifically, on the British front, there is Henry Cartright, head of MI9 in Switzerland. MI9 dealt with escape routes out of Switzerland, although the role of MI6 has been little written about, in terms of the use and significance of information that debriefed escapees must have provided to intelligence networks, for attacks on Germany. Cartwright was a world War I escapee himself, whose best seller on the subject was avid Nazi reading in WWII, for obvious reasons. That house was watched closely by the Swiss Police too, reported for high antics, and for harbouring ‘a nest of spies’. Its owners were friends with the head of the Berne police though, and so probably protected, in the semi neutral atmosphere of smoke and mirrors diplomacy. One affected in Switzerland by the changing winds of war.

Soon after the war though, they received a grateful card from the British Legation, commending the couple not only for hospitality, but for their invaluable help to British and American escapees. It makes a family visitor’s book a very important historical document, as are unseen papers on Hitler and Edda Mussolini. Perhaps significantly, they received no such commendations from US Services, since spying rarely stops. The question still remains though as to how much their Brit guests were aware of the depth of their American connections, because the house’s true significance is testified to by a meeting in 1945, still a mystery, that involved a visit by colonels at the heart of SHAEF, The Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force, and ETOUSA, American Theatre of Operations, during Operation Overlord. They had helped covertly in a war that would see Nazi scientists smuggled to America too, in the battle for the A-Bomb, under Dulles’s Operation Paperclip, and herald the triumph of American world hegemony, in more ways than simple military victory. If information is power, cash rich America certainly won the covert war, because America soon had vast reserves of European files transferred to Washington. Incidentally, some 6000 secret papers relating to Switzerland, and designated Safehaven, remain closed.

There is one rather surprising name in the visitor’s book too though, on an evening in 1943 – Drue Mackenzie Robertson. She is actually Drue Heinz, future wife of the Baked Bean and Ketchup Multi-Millionaire, Henry J Heinz. She was a doyenne of New York Society for many years – writing letters to the New Yorker in 1944, so she may have been back in the States by then – but also became a celebrated patron of the literary arts. One the flapping Phoenix Ark could certainly do with a little help from – for our love of stories, real and fictional! She is publisher of The Paris Review, established the Drue Heinz Literature Prize, and her foundation endows the Drue Heinz lecture series in Pittsburg. At the Carnegie Museum of Art, her foundation also funds exhibitions at the Heinz Architectural Centre, and supports The Lincoln Centre Review. Having endowed a chair of American Literature at St John’s College, Oxford, and involved with Hertford College too, Drue Heinz has long been at the very epicentre of American Arts and Culture, but also influential in the UK. In 2002 she was made an Honorary Fellow of The Royal Society of Literature.

Born Doreen Mary English, Mrs Heinz clearly had a taste for theatrics earlier on, and as an actress, earned a small part in the movie Uneasy Terms, in 1948. It is all a long time ago, and many lives have passed in-between, so distance affords both mystery, and admiration, for a now grand old literary lady. But what of such tantalising ‘skull and bones’ in her cupboard, and was Drue Heinz really part of the OSS too, America’s Office of Strategic Services, or only linked by association? The term spy became a very moveable feast during the war, but it is an open secret that some of the most fertile areas of unwritten intelligence history are neutral territories, and Switzerland is no exception. Drue Heinz was there that night in Switzerland, 67 years ago, in 1943, and her signature is on the visitor’s page too, below her second husband, Dale Wilford Maher. As a graduate of the US Cavalry School and military attaché, Maher is a dead ringer for a spy, and signs himself ‘Master of the Five by Five”. That entry rather bemused this excited researcher, until, last year, one of the obvious links sprang fully armed from the pages of history, to validate a remarkable story, worthy of a movie, or a very stylish spy novel. ‘Five by Five’ was official Nato parlance for the best quality wireless transmissions, namely ‘reading you loud and clear’.

These people based at the American Legation then, and guests at a private home, were sending back radio reports, as Dulles himself began nightly transmissions from Switzerland, which in a coming technological age changed the cloak and dagger style of British dominated spying. It was the dawn of a new era, and they specialised in American style code words, like ‘Fatboy’ for Herman Goering. Stationed in Berne, in his beautiful flat in the Herengasse, Dulles’s own rather charming code name was Mr Burns, so you might take another glance at the satirical cartoon The Simpsons. To underline the personal touch, that Dulles would stamp all over the CIA, he called the technique for an operative communicating with a plane overhead by radio, ‘J-E Operations’. It came from the initials of Dulles’s daughter Joan, and his sister Eleanor. Despite British fears, Dulles’s work never compromised the greatest British coup though, in his supposedly ‘gung ho’ and open door approach. A coup embodied in the Enigma project, and Ultra transmissions, concealing the fact Britain had cracked and could read all German messages at the start of the war. British archives, although still closed, reveal a wireless transmitor was installed in their own Swiss legation in 1943.

Dulles, whose obsession would soon become the Soviet threat, and who encouraged later assassination programmes, out of the no-holes-barred tactics learnt in defeating the Nazis, notably had shares in the American Fruit Company, and has a rather more suspect role after his heroic war effort. Allied propaganda was one of his specialities in Switzerland, and as a master of dis-information, he was to be involved in a Mind Control programme, and Operation Mockingbird – perhaps he liked Harper Lee – the CIA’s attempt to directly influence the American media. Another visitor to that house would be Captain Tracy Barnes, a so-called ‘Jedburgh Agent’, and code named ‘Trick’, who would later turn up in the Cuban ‘Bay of Pigs’ debacle. It was of course Cuban bedeviled Kennedy who said of the CIA that he would like to scatter the organisation ‘to the four winds’. But what of Drue Heinz, whose Wikepedia profile is rather thin? Tantalizingly, that evening Drue Heinz signed herself in appealingly Mata Hari vein, for such a sparkling Manhattan hostess-to-be – “Queenie – the Striptease Queen!” The intense passions and fortunes of war, and such heady Swiss excitement, may have been too much for some. Dale Maher died in 1948, and his forwarding address on the internet is simply listed as ‘The State Department’. Drue Mackenzie Robertson married Henry J. Heinz II in 1953, becoming his third wife, and so perhaps beginning her powerful and passionate role in fiction and the arts. A passion fully shared by Phoenix Ark Press, although admittedly with a sometimes sceptical eye on other literary powers that be.

If you enjoyed this article, which is exclusive and under copyright, you can donate to building a little writer’s publisher:

Phoenix Ark Press errors: If anything is factually wrong in any articles on the Blog, please write to us direct, and we will enadeavour to check and correct.

1 Comment

Filed under Culture, Education, Thrillers, Uncategorized

WELCOME TO THE MAYAN END OF EVERYTHING!

Phoenix Ark Press are delighted to share an article by David Clement-Davies on the Mayan Calendar in The Weissman Report Click Here

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized