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ANDY Writes ...
Way back in the late 1960s, I
was introduced by Adrian (Henri) to his friend Bernard Stone,
who had a bookshop in Kensington Church Walk, called Turret Books.
Bernard published lavish limited editions of poetry, art and
music. All on hand-made paper and signed by the writers, etc.
He also sold books, mainly second-hand, and put on readings in
the shop as well. I played there with Adrian several times. The
shop ran like a club! You walked in (and this went for anyone!),
and within 5 minutes you had a glass of wine (which became several
within half an hour) and Bernard was enthusing madly about someone
or something he wanted to put on the map. He was brilliant!!
Regular liggers in the shop were Reginald Bosanquet (ITN newscaster),
Ralph Steadman (illustrator), Frank Dickens (cartoonist - Bristow,
etc), Adrian when he was in London, actually loads of the great
and good in literature. I loved it.
One day, browsing the shelves, I found a row of books on aviation.
The Search For Amelia Earhart by Frederick Goerner was on that
shelf. I browsed it and bought it for next to nothing, maybe
2 shillings (2/-). Once I read it, I became obsessed with the
story it contained, passed it on to Iain who devoured it, then
to David and Bobby. We started telling the outline story to the
audiences at our early gigs, then Ian wrote his True Story and
we were away. When we made the first album we all instinctively
knew that Amelia's story, and particularly the Fred Goerner theory,
was the identity that would work for us. You have to admit it
was a good one - people remember it. Seabrook Graves Aslitt did
that wonderful sleeve design, and something timeless was born.
I remember that when we launched the record Bernard Stone got
us a box of the books for the press. He must have found about
20 copies for us! I gave mine away endlessly, got it back, gave
it away again.
Then in 1995 when I was doing Mad Love for Disney, I found 2
copies in a bookshop in Burbank. Hardbacks, one signed by Fred
Goerner ($30) and one not ($6). I bought the cheap one! The hardback
has more pictures than the paperback. I will never give it away
again.
In time Turret Books moved to Covent Garden, then the Grays Inn
Road. I last saw Bernard at the Chelsea Arts Club, about 7 years
ago. Business was never easy for him, and I think eventually
the shop folded, but he was responsible for a great thing in
my life, the whole Amelia Earhart passion that has never left
us, and I honour him for it.
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