Hamilton Wende
Hamilton Wende and Prynnsberg PDF Print E-mail
Written by Hamilton Wende   
Tuesday, 11 January 2011 11:38
SO YOU WANT TO WRITE THAT BOOK?

Don’t believe anyone who tells you that you can’t learn to write.

Hamilton Wende is an award-winning writer and journalist.  He has published 6 books, fiction and non-fiction, ranging from The Quagga’s Secret, a children’s picture book, to Deadlines from the Edge, an account of his travels as a reporter, to his most recent novel brought out by Penguin, House of War, a thriller based in Afghanistan.  He has been a regular guest lecturer in creative writing and non-fiction narrative at Wits, Rhodes & UCT.

The Prynnsberg programme is proud to partner with Hamilton Wende to create a unique and exciting writer’s workshop.  Prynnsberg is one of the great old houses of Africa; a Victorian masterpiece, built by diamond magnate Charles Newberry in 1881.

 Prynnsberg and its surrounding gardens, chapels and rocky veld is the perfect and inspiring place to spend a creative retreat with Hamilton Wende finding ways to begin, or to finish, that elusive book which has both frustrated and beguiled you for so long now.

The workshop will take place on the 25,26,27 February.  It will consist of a series of group discussion and writing exercises designed to progress from one step to the next so that you leave with the real, tangible beginnings of that book you always dreamed about writing. There will be ongoing courses, so enquire about AVAILABITY.

 Unfortunately, there will not be time to read and consider entire manuscripts on the weekend.  The workshop is an intensive course that will run from Friday lunchtime to Sunday lunchtime. In the workshops we will look at:

-        How, where to begin?

-        Voice, style, originality, language

-        Plot, narrative structure, the logic of story-telling

-        Fiction or non-fiction?

-        Manuscripts, editing, making your final draft the best it can be

-        How and where to find a publisher

-        For more information check out www.hamiltonwende.com and www.prynnsberg.co.za Space is limited so book now with This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

 
Hamilton Wende's House of War PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 06 October 2009 10:10

house of war
 

Sebastian Burke, a British academic, has spent his whole life trying to understand the secret life of Alexander the Great and his slave bride Roxanne. Now, with the Taliban forced underground, he finally has the opportunity to undertake the journey he has dreamed of for almost his entire adult life, a journey into the heart of Alexander's world, a journey to the lost city of Ay Khanoum in northern Afghanistan. Here, with the help of Claire Finch - a fiercely independent American documentary producer - he hopes to find and expose to the world the contents of the Royal Diaries of Alexander - the last copies of which were kept in the city before its destruction by barbarian invaders from the East. However, from the moment two American servicemen are murdered by Al Qaeda terrorists in the bar of their hotel in Tashkent it becomes clear that there is far more at stake than just Sebastian's reputation as an historian, and what started out as a quest to validate a lifetime of academic study quickly turns into a journey of discovery that will bring Sebastian face to face with his Rhodesian past - a past he has run from for over thirty years.

To buy this book online click here 

Last Updated on Thursday, 15 October 2009 16:52
 
Extract Print E-mail

A sudden, hard click.  The crash of a door being forced open.  A loud bang bursting like a firecracker, then another, and another.  Claire finds herself falling, tumbling onto the floor, each movement she makes punctuated by the gunfire erupting around her.  It is a familiar feeling, this eerie sense of suddenly, violently, being disconnected from the world; and the instincts she has developed over the years come flooding back.  It could be a dream, or, more accurately, a nightmare, happening around her, but she knows it’s not.  She’s been here before – too many times.  Someone is trying to kill someone else and she is caught in the middle of it.

Around her, the bar explodes into pandemonium.  The young blonde prostitute sitting near her screams, holding her hands to her face; the businessmen around her are diving off the armchairs and scrabbling for cover on the carpet.  Claire finds herself pulling the camera out of her backpack, cursing, fuck it, fuck it, fuck it as the lens gets caught on the zip.  As she turns on the palmcorder with trembling fingers and flips open the viewfinder she forgets what’s happening around her and disappears into the tiny slightly blurred world of the viewfinder.

Inside its rectangular limits, two men with Makarov pistols are moving in the far corner of the bar near the emergency exit.  The American soldiers in jeans and T-shirts who had been sitting there are now slumped over the table in front of them.  Blood pours from the back of their heads, mingling with the ice and the spilled Coke on the glass table top.  One of the killers drags the wounded body of an American sideways across the table.  There is another bang as he pumps a shot into the man’s temple.  The force of the blast erupts into the victim’s head.

The doorman from the lobby runs into the bar.  He is wearing the absurd gold-buttoned uniform that he greets guests with downstairs, but now he is carrying an AK-47.  He starts pouring bullets into the corner of the bar where the killers are.  The rapid sound of the shots hammer through the air.  There is more screaming and the crash of glass shattering.  The wood panels spring large gaping holes.  Another of the male hotel staff rushes in with an AK.  He looses a burst of fire into the ceiling and then sweeps the gun over the bar.  The businessmen hunker down even lower.  One of them puts up his hand as if to plead for his life.

She doesn’t know why she does it, but she pans the camera over at where Sebastian had been sitting.  Inside the viewfinder, she sees him crouching amongst the others who are huddled on the floor, screaming, some of them even sobbing.  But Sebastian is silent, and his eyes are watching, flickering over the scene of chaos in the bar around them.  She sees the clarity in his eyes, and she knows, that like her, and unlike most of the rest of the people around them, he is not panicking.  She knows immediately that he has been in this kind of chaos of gunfire and blood before.  She sees through the electronic haze of the tiny viewfinder screen that he is looking, searching for something, for a way out, perhaps, or, maybe a weapon – for some way of fighting back. 

Claire pans the camera away towards the action as rapidly as she panned it over him.  The doorman with the AK-47 is turning inside the viewfinder, holding his gun in his hands.  Then he runs past her crunching through the snow of broken glass on the blood-spattered carpet, chasing the killers into the shadows.

 . . .                   
 
Dionysus, the ancient god of blood and ecstasy, part beast, part human, has the power to unleash the deepest primeval forces that beat in our hearts, those of cruelty and lust.  According to Greek myth, in the earliest times, Dionysus and his crazed Maenads erupted into Asia, conquering everything before them in a frenzy of madness and violence.  None could stand before them and the truth of their unleashed desire.  Alexander believed he embodied Dionysus, that in his march, he was following in the footsteps of the god himself, and that his drinking bouts were a form of worship.

Men, women, love, sex and power became an increasingly riotous, intoxicating mix in Alexander’s own march.  These were all people in their late twenties or early thirties – all at their sexual peak, let loose on the greatest orgy of conquest, looted splendour and untrammelled lust that the world had ever known.
Like the Maenads of ancient myth, they killed and raged down the Royal Road to Persepolis, the Holy City of Zoroaster, filled with its winged palaces and temples of light.

Drunk with the pleasures of victory, the Greeks sacked the city, carrying away its treasure on the backs of a vast train of mules and camels.  For months, they seethed in their masses through the wonders of the city, looting, drinking and indulging in orgies with each other and with the whores who followed in their wake, or with the Persian women they had enslaved.  There were no limits to the debauch.  Banquet followed banquet.  One wild night, the alluring Thaïs, already at 17, a famous, high-class prostitute from Athens, who, too, had found her way into Alexander’s bed, stood up and drunkenly taunted him to burn the city in revenge for the Persian destruction of Athens.

A wine-flushed Alexander rose to his feet and cried out: ‘Why do we not avenge Greece, then, and put the city to the torch?’  A wild Dionysiac frenzy began.  To the sound of singing, pipes and flutes, first Alexander and then Thaïs flung blazing torches into midst of the magnificent Hundred-Columned Hall.  The fires blazed through the night and by morning there was nothing left but ashes and blackened stone columns standing like giant gravestones.

 
Hamilton Wende on You Tube PDF Print E-mail
Written by Hamilton Wende   
Tuesday, 22 September 2009 16:29

 

 

Check out the video shot in my study by my lovely wife Lianne where I am talking about how when I was covering the fall of the Taliban I came across the lost city of Ay Khanoum on the front lines between the Taliban and the Northern Alliance which led to my writing 'House of War'

Here's the You Tube link:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2drt2yfSp8

 

 

 

 
The House of War Print E-mail

Recently acquired by Penguin Books, South Africa, The House of War is a novel about the search for the ruins of an ancient Greek city founded by Alexander the Great in today’s war-torn northern Afghanistan.  The book draws its inspiration from Michael Ondaatje, Graham Greene, John Le Carre, Sebastian Faulks and Ken Follett.  Peopled with warlords, Al Qaeda renegades and NATO troops, The House of War is a psychological thriller, a spy story, a romance, and a quest.

Worldwide rights ex-SA are available. Contact Ronald Irwin for more information.

Synopsis

Tashkent, Uzbekistan:  When Al Qaeda terrorists shoot dead two American soldiers in a bar, Sebastian Richards, a brilliant 40-something British academic, is unexpectedly brought face to face with the sinister truth of his own life that he has hidden for over 30 years.

He had come to Tashkent to fulfill a lifelong dream to make a documentary film and write a best-selling book on Alexander and his wife Roxane.  The secret to their love, Sebastian believes, is held in a long-lost copy of Alexander’s Royal Diaries which was stored for millennia in the ancient city of Ay Khanoum in northern Afghanistan.

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