“There is a nice sense of period about these kids coping on their own under extraordinary, but quite believable circumstances, lisle pullovers and plimsolls at the ready but the human anguish between them is universal and timeless, although there are lots of laughs on the way, too. Highly recommended.” The Stage

Original by Arthur Ransome Adapted by Nick Wood Father is away and mother brings Roger, John, Susan and Titty to stay at Pin Mill where they can spend the summer messing about in boats. Their adventure begins when they go out with Jim on his boat Goblin. But disaster strikes when the boat is becalmed and Jim goes ashore to fetch petrol. Fog descends over the Harwich estuary and, as the tide turns, the boat begins to drift away ...
Les mer
Original by Arthur Ransome Adapted by Nick Wood Father is away and mother brings Roger, John, Susan and Titty to stay at Pin Mill where they can spend the summer messing about in boats. Their adventure begins when they go out with Jim on his boat Goblin. But disaster strikes when the boat is becalmed and Jim goes ashore to fetch petrol. Fog descends over the Harwich estuary and, as the tide turns, the boat begins to drift away ...
Les mer
TITTY Only the evening before they had come down the deep green lane to Pin Mill that ended in the river itself, and slept for the first time at Alma Cottage … ROGER Whoa! Hang on a minute. Stop there. TITTY What’s the matter? ROGER ‘They had come down?’ You said you were writing about us. SUSAN Let Titty do it the way she wants to, Roger. ROGER I’m only saying if it’s our story, and she’s telling it, she should put ‘we’, not ‘they’. TITTY He’s right. (Roger grins at her.) Worse luck. (She crosses out what she’s written.) Only the evening before we had come down the deep green lane to Pin Mill that ended in the river itself, and slept for the first time at Alma Cottage. We woke up to see the river, with its yachts, big brown sailed barges, and steamers going up to Ipswich, or down to the sea. ROGER We spent the morning watching the tide coming in, and envying the people who kept putting off to the anchored yachts or coming ashore from them. JOHN Then, in the afternoon, one of the men from the boat yard took pity on us and found an old dinghy we could use.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781906582050
Publisert
2010
Utgiver
Vendor
Aurora Metro Books
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
96

Forfatter
Adapted by

Biographical note

Nick was an actor, a freelance journalist, and a teacher before becoming a full-time writer. Commissions include: Radio 4, Derby Theatre, Eastern Angles, Thalia Theatre Hamburg, Action Transport, The Drum, Plymouth, Theatr Iolo, Hans Otto Theater Potsdam, Jumper Up Theatre, and Nottingham Playhouse. Plays include: Warrior Square, Mia, A Dream of White Horses, My Name is Stephen Luckwell, The Children of the Crown, and About A Band. His plays have been translated into several languages and performed in France, Germany, Austria, Luxemburg, Hong Kong, USA, Canada, Albania, Croatia, Serbia, Poland, Denmark, Montenegro, Russia, Switzerland, and South Korea. With Andrew Breakwell he started New Theatre Nottingham and recently returned to acting touring his new one-man play A Girl With A Book. Currently there are twelve productions of A Girl With A Book by companies in Denmark, Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In June 2016 Eastern Angles revived their production of his adaptation of We Didn’t Mean to Go To Sea and in September his adaptation of Mick Jackson’s The Underground Man opens at Nottingham Playhouse before a UK tour, and also in the autumn Getting Better Slowly, a play involving dance and verbatim theatre about Guillaine Barre Syndrome will open its tour at the Lincoln Drill Hall. Arthur Ransome Arthur is best-known for Swallows and Amazons and the series of books he wrote about a family holidaying in the Norfolk Broads where they enjoy camping, fishing and sailing. They became modern classics and have been translated into many languages. He won the first Carnegie Medal for Literature in 1936 for Pigeon Post, whilst also working as a journalist on The Manchester Guardian. He later compiled a book of Russian folklore titled Old Peter’s Russian Tales.