I have settled down to review THE PRISONER
DUSTED DOWN by David Stimpson.
by Chris Riley
Before
I get to the book, I have to review the title. It is appropriate. It is brief
enough to appear on the cover and is what the author set out to do.
In my mind I had alternative thoughts on a
title;
You think you knew the
Prisoner – Think again!!!!
How to quench your thirst
with sea water.
How to extinguish a fire
using only petrol!!!!
Or
a line from that spoof soap American series – Confused? You soon will be.
The first important point to make is that
you should not be frightened by the book. I am a prolific reader. I do not have
a favourite genre. I will read anything. However, I am a 300-page reader. This
is a 500-page book and I am a sprinter not a marathon man person when it comes
to length of book. I don’t know if this is a common syndrome. If it is and this
is you, do not be put off. I have a fear of 500-page books which have 200 pages
of padding.
DUSTED DOWN has no padding. It is all meat.
It is a fast flowing river from first to last page. You never rest.
I have to be intentionally vague on detail
because any slight reference to specific content would be a spoiler alert.
I thought I knew The Prisoner reasonably
well. I realised after the first few pages I did not. Having seen it numerous
times over 50 years, I now realise how little I have scratched the surface.
I likened DUSTED DOWN to reading Franz
Kafka’s Das Schloss [The Castle]. I read The Castle on my brother’s advice
annually for several years. On each reading I noticed more hidden meanings
which I think the author had inserted subliminally or that I had perceived with
no intention by the author to have had any relevance to the story. One has a
similar experience from DUSTED DOWN. The book has the ability to make the
reader delve much more deeply into the episodes which may have been considered
to be of less depth or importance than others. While readers of this review may
presume which episodes I am referring to, I am not going to name them. Even
this would be a spoiler alert because one cannot assume that we all have the
same prejudices or preferences.
The
depth of analysis is incredible. I read any spare second I have. On the bus, on
the train, coffee breaks at work or having a pint (I have sent the author
photographic evidence of this].
I have missed my bus stop on several
occasions, having been so engrossed.
DUSTED
DOWN makes you think about The Prisoner from a much deeper viewpoint and from a
different angle.
You are not just thinking about it from the
view point of watching a programme and trying to understand it whilst enjoying
it. My subjective opinion is that with THE PRISONER DUSTED DOWN you are trying
to place yourself into Patrick McGhooan’s mindset and deciphering how he
approached the episode, dialogue, choice of prop, location, in fact every
aspect of the writing, filming and editing of a scene or episode.
The author digresses into how dialogue,
characters, props and locations fit with matters outside of the series, be it
fact, myth or meaning. The author digresses more than Ronnie Corbett in an
armchair monologue. You are taken on journeys where you thought the series
could never transport you.
I was so enthralled, interested and
intrigued that I was drawn to email the author as I read to advise on my
thoughts. Most of my comments were to advise that having considered the author’s
observations, that this had not cleared matters but rather it had caused me to
think more deeply about a scene or episode and had caused me to form a
different view.
Each chapter is compartmentalised to cause
the reader to adopt a fresh mindset and to concentrate the memory on a
particular episode.
As I said at the outset, any particular
reference to text could be a potential spoiler alert to any reader. This is
because if every person in the world read this book, they would approach it
from a different angle.
So, has DUSTED DOWN dusted down The
Prisoner for me?
What does DUSTED DOWN mean?
To prepare something for use, especially
after it has not been used for a long time.
To dust off old books to start studying.
As I opened this review, the book is
whatever you perceive it to be. It is not possible to give it a title which
fits the text and would fit on the cover.
As simply as it can be put, it is a book
which makes you think about The Prisoner afresh and from at least one other viewpoint.
This is an excellent and incredibly
detailed book which is the result of a vast amount of research and effort by an
author who knows his subject.
I would advise anybody to read it, even if
you have not seen The Prisoner. After one chapter you would watch the series
and then read the rest of the book. I now need to watch whole series again!!!!!!
One
of my best ever reads.
Chris
Riley –
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