The Sunday Guardian

Among lesser known masters of nerve-wracking thrillers

On the occasion of the 95th birth anniversar­y of author Alistair MacLean, thriller writer par excellence, Vikas Datta looks back at his oeuvre and its lasting impact on global cinema.

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Glasgow but spent most of young days in a town near Inverness, spoke Scottish Gaelic as his mother tongue and learned English as a second language.

Joining the Royal Navy in 1941 during World War II, he served in the ranks but saw quite a bit of action in the Atlantic theatre, on escort duty with Arctic convoys, in the operation against German battleship Tirpitz, on various duties in the Mediterran­ean and finally in the Far East against the Japanese. All these experience­s would be reflected in some of his best adventures.

Demobilise­d in 1946, Ma- cLean studied English at the University of Glasgow and then worked as a school teacher. During his university days, he began writing short stories to earn some extra money. A maritimeth­emed story won a com- petition in 1954, and so impressed the publisher Collins that it asked him for a novel.

His debut HMS Ulysses ( 1955), based on his own war experience­s, as well as credited insight from his brother Ian, a more senior sailor, Master Mariner. The novel was a great success and MacLean was soon able to devote himself entirely to writing.

In rapid succession followed a chain of best-sellers including The Guns of Navarone (1957), South by Java Head ( 1957), Night Without End (1959), Ice Station Zebra ( 1963), Where Eagles Dare (1967), The Way to Dusty Death (1973), Breakheart Pass (1974), and more.

And it was quality stuff he wrote — in a bid to prove the worth of the content, he published two novels under the pseudonym “Ian Stuart” and they were equally successful. However, some critics contend that his best work came up to 1970, those till around the middle of the 1970s were of middling quality and the last half-dozen or so are more mechanical and depend on ambitiousl­y convoluted plots.

Among his oeuvre was When Eight Bells Toll (1966) — which is the one Sharmila Tagore is seen reading in Aradhana — but this was not his only tryst with Bollywood. His drugs thriller Puppet on a Chain (1969), which became a British film three years later, also inspired the super hit Bollywood starrer Dharmendra-Hema Malini Charas (1976).

In all, over half of his 28 novels were adapted for the big screen and if most of them remain quite true to the printed page, it is because MacLean wrote the screenplay — Where Eagles Dare most notably.

And MacLean, who is still in print, owes a bit of his popularity and acceptabil­ity among young impression­able minds for most notably eschewing the love element. Asked about this in an interview, he replied briskly: “Sex? No time for it. Gets in the way of the action.” IANS

In his almost three-decade-long writing career, Alistair Stuart MacLean (1922-87) wrote a little over two dozen novels, but several became famous as well as highly visible due to their film adaptation­s — The Guns of Navarone and Where Eagles Dare are the best examples.

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 ??  ?? Alistair Stuart MacLean (1922-87) wrote over two dozen novels.
Alistair Stuart MacLean (1922-87) wrote over two dozen novels.
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