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Anthony Shaffer (1) (1926–2001)

Author of The Wicker Man [novelization]

For other authors named Anthony Shaffer, see the disambiguation page.

19+ Works 1,300 Members 23 Reviews

About the Author

Anthony Joshua Shaffer was born in Liverpool, England on May 15, 1926. He received a degree in law from Cambridge University in 1950. From 1951 to 1957, he practiced law in London and wrote three novels his fraternal twin Peter Shaffer including How Doth the Little Crocodile? under the joint show more pseudonym Peter Anthony. Anthony Shaffer then worked in advertising before setting up his own television production company and eventually turning to writing full time. His best known play Sleuth ran for more than 2,300 performances in London's West End and more than 2,000 on Broadway. It won a Tony Award as the best play of 1970 and became a film in 1972 starring Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine. His other plays included The Savage Parade, Murderer, and The Case of the Oily Levantine, which came to Broadway in 1982 as Whodunnit. He also wrote film scripts for Frenzy, The Wicker Man, Murder on the Orient Express, Death on the Nile, and Evil Under the Sun. He wrote an autobiography entitled So What Did You Expect? He died on November 6, 2001 at the age of 75. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Anthony Shaffer

The Wicker Man [novelization] (1978) — Author — 299 copies, 11 reviews
The Wicker Man [1973 film] (1973) — Screenwriter — 233 copies, 2 reviews
Sleuth: A Play (1970) 205 copies, 3 reviews
Death on the Nile [1978 film] (1978) — Screenwriter — 134 copies, 3 reviews
Evil Under the Sun [1982 film] (1982) — Screenwriter — 105 copies, 1 review
The Wicker Man [2006 film] (1973) — Screenwriter — 99 copies
Sleuth [1972 film] (1988) — Screenwriter — 63 copies
Murderer: A Play in Two Acts (1976) 57 copies, 2 reviews
Appointment with Death [1988 film] (1988) — Screenwriter — 30 copies
Absolution (1979) 14 copies
Withered Murder (1955) 7 copies
Absolution [1978 film] (1978) — Screenwriter — 7 copies, 1 review
The Wicker Man: The Final Cut (2014) — Screenplay — 6 copies

Associated Works

Frenzy [1972 film] (1972) — Screenwriter, some editions — 125 copies, 3 reviews
Alfred Hitchcock: The Masterpiece Collection [14 films 1942-1976] (1942) — Writer — 116 copies, 2 reviews
Best Mystery and Suspense Plays of the Modern Theatre (1971) — Contributor — 61 copies
Sleuth [2007 film] (2008) — Original play — 46 copies
Sweet Revenge (1992) — Contributor — 29 copies
The Mammoth Book of Movie Detectives and Screen Crimes (1998) — Contributor — 24 copies, 1 review
Best (10 American) Plays of the Seventies (1970s) (1980) — Contributor — 12 copies

Tagged

1970s (20) 20th century (10) Agatha Christie (22) British (13) crime (18) drama (31) DVD (91) fiction (68) film (51) folk horror (15) Hercule Poirot (10) horror (101) movie (16) movie tie-in (11) movies (13) mystery (76) novel (10) paganism (18) Peter Ustinov (10) play (18) plays (20) Poirot (11) religion (11) Scotland (12) script (11) suspense (12) theatre (15) thriller (33) to-read (26) Wicker Man (15)

Common Knowledge

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Reviews

30 reviews
Perhaps I do suffer from POP syndrome (see the preceding review) because I read this play after thoroughly enjoying a performance of it at our local theatre. The dialogue is so intelligent and the plot twists so intricate that I wanted to see the words...savour it at my own pace. I was not disappointed. A wonderful read about ego, insecurities, jealousy....a great examination of character and a story that will keep you on your toes.
By and large, pagans are annoying, combining as they do the unholy trinity of the self righteousness of a religious group that considers itself misunderstood, the smugness of a religious group that feels that they are the true religion and hence are privy to The Answer, and their unique element of dressing and behaving like characters at a live fantasy role playing weekend.

Pagans essentially fall into two groups. The first of these is pagan lite. These are the ones that you see at festivals, show more who once read a book about ley-lines but have yet to realise that there is more to being a pagan than black mascara, piercings, lots of bad silver jewellery and arseing around at Glastonbury.

These are the sort of people who complained bitterly for years that they were being denied freedom of religious expression because they couldn't get access to Stonehenge during certain festivals and, when English Heritage relented and allowed them access to the site on the solstice, celebrated their religious freedom by sitting cross legged on a rock playing a flute, badly, and guzzling Merrydown, all the while being studiously ignored by the 'real' pagans, that is; blokes in beards and white sheets who claim to be Druids and, because of health and safety regulations, are confined to 'sacrificing' a leg of lamb, all the while wishing for a return to the good old days when they would be up to their elbows in virgin.

The pagans in 'The Wicker Man' are quite a different proposition altogether. Some have beards, some drink cider but all are from what one might call the fundamentalist end of pagan religion.

The plot concerns a staunchly Christian Highland police sergeant who receives a letter reporting that a child has gone missing on a remote Scottish island, famous for it's apples and isolated nature. Sergeant Howie investigates and discovers a closed community practicing the pagan faith and particularly fertility rituals at every opportunity, especially those that require flouncing round a maypole or bonking. The Sergeant does not approve, but al fresco group sex is the least of his problems as he uncovers what he suspects is an island wide conspiracy.

Howie is, literally, a man alone, stranded friendless on an island. Small islands can be weird places, they don't even have to be surrounded by sea. Anyone who has been to a remote farming community, insular and cut off from the world by a sea of wheat or beet will know that they can be peculiar places, home to a peculiar people. That effect is enhanced here because the whole island is a farming community and, surrounded by the Atlantic, there really is no escape.

The sense of menace and tension grows with every turn of the page and every turn of events. Howie's paranoia, justified or not, is ramped up to a degree that the reader starts to feel a little of it themselves. There's a very uncomfortable suggestion that what's happening to Howie could happen just as easily to the reader. Anyone who has stopped in the middle of nowhere to fill up with petrol or ask for directions and felt somewhat uncomfortably cut off from the rest of the world, without even the comfort of a mobile 'phone signal, will recognise the sense of isolation.

Along with this growing sense of peril is one of anticipation. The book is called 'The Wicker Man' and one wonders just who or what the wicker man may be. The revelation is a true moment of horror, possibly only working because the tension has been building throughout the book.

The oddness of the place, a Scottish island that grows fruit and the oddness of it's inhabitants (these are not 'pagan lite' folk) is subtly conveyed. The island's Laird, Summerisle himself, is as suave and charismatic as you could hope for in somebody who may just be behind all the shady goings on, his cool confidence only faltering in his last exchange with Howie.

A disturbing and thought provoking novel that moves from thriller to horror in chilling increments. Not one to be read on a caravanning holiday in the back of beyond, but certainly one to be read.
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I don't know many people to whom I would recommend this book. It's a mystery. It's a story of religious conflict. It's a story of ancient rites enacted in a not-yet-modern place. It's the story of a stranger in a strange land. It's a passion play.

If you like "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson, you might like this much longer exploration of the theme of a community united in the process of selecting and making a sacrifice.

If you like Katherine Kurtz's "Lammas Night" you might like this darker show more exploration of the themes.

Personally, as someone who has been both a devout Christian and a devout Pagan, I enjoyed the mutual incomprehension of Sgt. Howie and the islanders.

The writing is good, although not extraordinary. I've seen other reviews complaining that the characters don't have depth, but I don't think they need it. They are archetypes, just as much as the Hobbyhorse and Punch, who appear in the final pages. We know just as much as we need to about everyone in the story. To add details would have detracted from the mythic quality.
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I first saw the movie 30 years ago and, until recently, I had no idea that the novel even existed. Then I felt compelled to read it.

It took me less than 48 hours to whip through this book; much of it contained dialogue and scenes translated directly from screenplay to page. The book contains scenes that were edited from the movie (the original VHS version of the movie included them, but I have not yet watched a DVD which contains those scenes)as well as additional material.

This novel is such show more a faithful adaptation of the film that any fan of the movie should enjoy reading the book.

I'm a little conflicted about The Wicker Man. As a traditional Celtic pagan, I am dismayed by the proliferation of the human sacrifice myth (as well as a horrific scene of animal sacrifice, that was one literary addition that I really could have lived without). One would think that maintaining a voluntarily separatist community devoted solely to their worship would be enough appeasement for the old goddesses and gods! That is the Summerisle that I would love to live on, certainly.
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Awards

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Associated Authors

David Pinner Original novel
Peter Buckman Screenwriter
Agatha Christie Original novel
Peter Snell Producer
Paul Giovanni Composer
Roy Boyd Actor
Harry Waxman Cinematographer
Reg Lye Actor
Jon Finch Actor
Nino Rota Composer
Jack Cardiff Cinematographer
Cole Porter Composer
Christopher Challis Cinematographer
David Gurfinkel Cinematographer
Pino Donaggio Composer
Yoram Globus Producer
Menahem Golan Producer
Paul Bacon Jacket designer
Allan Brown Introduction

Statistics

Works
19
Also by
7
Members
1,300
Popularity
#19,756
Rating
3.8
Reviews
23
ISBNs
63
Languages
3

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