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The Siege of Swayne Castle

by R. C. Sherriff
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Current price ₹1,647.00
Original price ₹2,209.00
Original price ₹2,209.00
Original price ₹2,209.00
(-25%)
₹1,647.00
Current price ₹1,647.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9781447221050
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Pan Macmillan
  • Publisher Imprint: Pan Macmillan
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 154
  • Original Price: GBP 16.99
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 258 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Historical / Medieval

Lord Swayne owned a well-protected castle on a particularly strategic stretch of the English coast. A powerful Earl with estates nearby coveted the castle and its surrounding land. Under the guise of protecting King John from treachery, he declared his intention of 'smashing the castle to the ground, hanging the garrison amidst its ruins and wiping the pestilent Swaynes off the face of the earth'. Lord Swayne had some advantages however, one of which was that he held the Earl's son, Gregory, captive.
This is a fascinating account of a medieval siege. It is also the story of the growing friendship between two boys, Lord Swayne's son Roger, and his prisoner, Gregory.
'The techniques and tragedies of medieval siege can seldom have been described in such a clear-cut, practical way; this exciting one-thing-after-another tale should be spread very widely among history-lovers and also those who have scant interest in the past.' Sunday Times

Writing in the late 1960's Sherriff said "The other day I went to give the prizes away at a nearby school. Afterwards there was a little reception, with coffee and cakes. An old lady who brought me a cup of coffee said, "I did enjoy Journey's End, Mr Sherriff. Why don't you write something else?"

On his return from fighting in the First World War, Sherriff settled down into a suburban life in London, working as an agent for an insurance company and writing plays in the evening. The plays were written to be performed at fundraising events for his beloved Kingston Rowing Club.

Journey's End, which was inspired by Sherriff's own experience of fighting in the First World War, was his sixth play but the first to be given a professional production. It was an immediate, outstanding and phenomenal success. Thirty one separate productions ran concurrently around the world and it was translated into twenty six languages. Its success, however, was both a boon and a burden to Sherriff for although it allowed him to give up the day job and devote himself full-time to writing it often overshadowed his later work or was used as the yardstick against which it was measured unfavourably.

Fortunately for Sherriff he was not only a playwright but also a novelist and a screenwriter. When his second professional play, Badger's Green, flopped, he wrote a best-selling novel, A Fortnight In September. This attracted the attention of Hollywood and Carl Laemmle at Universal asked him to write the screenplay for The Invisible Man. Sherriff, accompanied by his widowed mother, went out to seek his fortune working for the new-fangled 'talkies'. When his stock began to wane in Hollywood he returned to England and wrote the screenplay for The Four Feathers for Alexander Korda. His reputation restablished he went on to write screenplays for classic films such as Goodbye Mr Chips (for which he received an Oscar nomination), Lady Hamilton, Odd Man Out, The Night My Number Came Up and The Dambusters.

But Sherriff had not lost his love of the theatre and, in the years following the end of the Second World War he had what he referred to as an "Indian summer" of playwriting success with Miss Mabel, Home at Seven, The White Carnation and The Long Sunset. Even so occupied as a playwright and screenwriter he did not lose his urge to write novels and he followed the success of his first novel with The Hopkins Manuscript, Chedworth , Another Year and others.

Now, while Journey's End continues to define Sherriff's reputation, much of his work remains ripe for rediscovery.

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