Effie’s War
In a remote corner of Scotland something
momentous is underway. When Effie’s father receives a government notice to
quite Kirk Farm, the lives of the Ross family and those of the whole community
are utterly disrupted.
But for Effie – irrepressible, beautiful,
vital – wartime changes bring her close to Toni, an Italian prisoner of war
sent to work on the farm. Before long, the young couple are planning a future
together when the war is finally over.
It’s a future that’s under threat from the
start, for there are those among them who cannot quite be trusted. Someone is
determined to find out what lies behind the upheaval – and to pass those
secrets into enemy hands. To stop them will create devastation beyond anything
anyone could have imagined.
Based on true events of the Second World
War, this evocative novel captures the emotions, dangers and atmosphere of the
days when the world faced its darkest hour.
Writers
and Ideas
I’m fascinated by how writers obtain ideas
and how both can be affected by time. Here’s a personal example of what I mean.
In the late 1970s I had the idea to write a stage play about domestic abuse
where the victim was male. Goodness knows where this came from as it was an era
when you simply didn’t read or hear anything about these matters. The timing
was poor. At the age of 20 such a drama was way beyond my ability and I doubt
that any theatre company would have touched this topic.
Fast forward to 2011; I was made redundant
and suddenly found myself with a great deal of spare time. I began to think again
of the idea I had back in the seventies and the result was that I used the
concept as the basis for a novel. Men Cry
Alone was published the following year. So, that idea had a gestation of
more than 30 years.
All my books have had completely different
‘beginnings’. My wife, Catherine, told me years ago about how hundreds of
people living locally, in the Highlands of Scotland near Tain, had been evicted
from the land during WW2. At that point I had a busy day job and was involved
in other writing projects, so I tucked away the details in the mental filing
cabinet that writers have, without considering doing anything with the
information.
Following the publication of my novel Casting Off towards the end of 2016, I had
intended to spend the next 12 months attempting to write short stories (not my
genre and I didn’t know if I could do it). However, Catherine and I visited the
Tarbat Discovery Centre in Portmahomack and I was reminded about the enforced mass
evacuation in WW2. On this occasion the timing was right. I was immediately
consumed by the desire to use these dramatic, real-life events as the backdrop
to a novel. The short stories were returned to the filing cabinet.
So what were these events? On 11th
November 1943 around 900 people living in the Tarbat peninsula were given four
weeks to leave their homes, crofts and farms. They were told that the military
wanted the land for battle practice. This wasn’t the full reason – they wanted
a stretch of beach to rehearse for the D Day landings, scheduled to take place
in Normandy the following year. Of course, this was one of the Allies’ greatest
secrets of the war. The farmers in the affected area had little option but to
sell all their livestock, which was heartbreaking for many. To help process
crops, Italian POWs were bought in from the camp in Kildary about five miles
away.
These events provided a fantastic backdrop
to Effie’s War, which was published
by Black & White Publishing on 6th June to coincide with the
anniversary of the D Day landings. It’s a book about love and loyalty, betrayal
and, finally, forgiveness, with most of the action taking place within those
highly-charged four weeks of November/December 1943.
The characters are entirely fictitious,
unlike my WW2 historical fiction The
Italian Chapel, where I set out to tell the amazing true story behind the
creation of Orkney’s famous Italian chapel and in doing so wrote about the real
artists involved. With Effie’s War I
wanted complete freedom as regards characters and I have to admit to enjoying
the feeling of ‘liberation’. Even so, I had to do a fair amount of research to
understand life in the Highlands during the 1940s and this required
interviewing many retired folk to get a grasp on subjects as diverse as farming
to funerals!
Readers have ranged from a twelve-year-old
girl to a ninety-eight-year-old lady. Interestingly, of all the comments made
at the many launch events I’ve managed to cram into the diary since the book’s
publication, the most perceptive came from that young girl.
Thanks so much for that fascinating post,
Philip. Wishing you great success with all your books!
You can find out more about Philip's other books on his website.
Author, playwright and journalist Philip Paris lives in the Highlands of Scotland with his wife, Catherine. He is best known for his books about Orkney’s famous Italian chapel, built by Italian POWs during WW2.
However, his work is diverse, ranging from a contemporary novel
about domestic abuse against men to a humorous novel about residents in a
Highland care home who, desperately trying to meet rising fees, set up a chat
line for men who want to speak to mature women ‘in a particular way’!
5 comments:
Hi Philip and Rosemary, It's always fascinating to hear where ideas came from and how long some of them took to mature. Something many writers will recognise. anne stenhouse
It's an interesting thought that our ideas which don't seem to work might not be poor ideas, it might be that it's just not their time yet.
I love hearing the inspiration for other writers too, Anne. Thanks for commenting.
Absolutely, Patsy - a good thing to remember!
Thank you Philip and Rosemary for such an interesting post. The book sounds fascinating as do the events that inspired it. That's one for my reading list!
Thanks so much for that, Teresa!
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