Daily Mail

Rocking the bookshops

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QUESTION

Has a rock star ever written a novel of any note? BRUCE DICKINSON, the lead singer of Iron Maiden, is a jack of all trades. Not only are his powerful operatic vocals some of the most recognisab­le in heavy metal, he is a commercial airline pilot, an expert fencer and a published author.

Dickinson wrote The Adventures Of Lord Iffy Boatrace while on tour with the band in 1987.

Published by Sidgwick & Jackson in 1990, it’s a sex romp in the mould of the satirist Tom Sharpe.

Lord Iffy Boatrace, whose estate is in a severe state of dilapidati­on, decides to raise money by arranging a shoot for the Old Boys from his public school, featuring an indestruct­ible ‘grouse’.

Even Boatrace, with his penchant for fishnet stockings and stiletto heels, is stunned by some of the dodgy antics of his guests — to say nothing of his ex-con butler, who invents a sex machine.

Although sales were big enough to warrant a sequel, The Missionary Position: The Further Advances Of Lord Iffy Boatrace, neither novel was considered for any literary awards!

A more successful example of a novelwriti­ng rock star is Nick Cave’s And The Ass Saw The Angel, published in 1989.

He is best known for fronting the band Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds and for his dark, complex lyrics.

His book tells the story of Euchrid Eucrow, a mute born with the aid of ‘a bottle and a box and a cradle of straw’, son of an alcoholic mother and a father obsessed with animal torture and the building of dangerous traps. The family live in a valley of religious fanatics, where they are shunned.

Cave’s second novel, The Death Of Bunny Munro, in 2009, is equally dark. Munro is a middle-aged womaniser and alcoholic, whose life hits crisis point when his wife commits suicide.

David Carroll, Beaconsfie­ld, Bucks. LOUISE WENER is the lead singer of the Britpop band Sleeper, best known for their top-ten single Sale Of The Century, in 1996. After the band split in 1998, she wrote four well- received novels: goodnight Steve McQueen, The Big Blind, The Half Life Of Stars and Worldwide Adventures In Love. Now reformed, Sleeper released a new album in March and toured the UK earlier this month.

Netflix show The Umbrella Academy is based on a series of graphic novels by gerard Way, former lead singer of U.S. indie rockers My Chemical Romance.

It tells the story of a dysfunctio­nal family of superheroe­s who pit their wits against zombie robot gustave Eiffel.

Louise Ebury, Wilmslow, Cheshire. WHILE there have been a number of pop stars turned writers, Leonard Cohen may be unique in being a successful writer turned musician.

Following two books of poetry, Let Us Compare Mythologie­s in 1956 and The Spice-Box Of Earth in 1961, his first novel was The Favourite game in 1963, which is a semi-autobiogra­phical story about the only son of an old Jewish family in Montreal.

The highly acclaimed Beautiful Losers is an experiment­al novel written on the greek island of Hydra and published in 1966. It is a stream- of- consciousn­ess story about an unnamed folklorist having a sexual crisis. Having lost his wife and male lover, he turns to the history of an Iroquois saint for his salvation.

Kim Smith, Cardiff.

QUESTION Is the word jersey connected to the Channel island?

JERSEY’S 2,000-year history is defined by its strategic location in the Channel. Formerly under the control of Brittany, it was once called Angia (Andium, Agna and Augia have also been used).

It was invaded by the Vikings in the ninth century, and the name Jersey is thought to be of Norse heritage. The suffix -ey for island can be found across northern European coasts.

The source of the first part of the name is unclear. Scholars surmise it derived from jarth, the Old Norse for Earth, jarl (earl) or the man’s name geirr.

Others hold that Jersey is a corruption of the Latin Caeserea, the Roman name for the island.

During Elizabetha­n times, Jersey and other Channel Islands began to import wool from England and the production of knitwear became so important that it threatened Jersey’s ability to produce its own food.

Despite the fact that laws were passed regulating the trade, the cottage industry for making waistcoats and woollen stockings coats on Jersey and guernsey thrived through the 17th and 18th centuries.

The goods were exported to England, France and further afield, and were valued for their high quality and finish. The knitted fabric jersey gained its name from the island.

Mike Butler, Canterbury, Kent.

QUESTION Can consuming nutmeg induce a disorienta­ting effect?

NUTMEg is the seed of the evergreen Myristica fragrans tree, which is native to Indonesia.

Large doses of nutmeg, far greater than those used in cooking, are known to have narcotic effects.

Nutmeg intoxicati­on begins with an excited and confused state, followed by headaches, nausea and dizziness, a dry mouth, bloodshot eyes and memory disturbanc­es. It may also induce hallucinog­enic effects.

Sufferers report feelings of claustroph­obia, high anxiety and a sense of doom lasting up to two days. Long-term effects include hearing and nerve problems, and heart arrhythmia. At least two deaths have been reported.

One of the main compounds responsibl­e for this effect is myristicin, which accounts for 1.3 per cent of raw nutmeg.

The exact manner in which it induces these effects is unclear. Because the same effects are not observed with the ingestion of pure myristicin, other compounds must also contribute.

Dr r. Patel, Leicester.

IS THERE a question to which you have always wanted to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question raised here? Send your questions and answers to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London, W8 5TT; fax them to 01952 780111 or email them to charles.legge@dailymail.co.uk. A selection will be published but we are not able to enter into individual correspond­ence.

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Paperback writer: Singer Nick Cave
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