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PILFERAGES 2014 Our Books,Their Books A Quiz on Popular Fiction by VENKATESH SRINIVASAN and VIVEK KARTHIKEYAN

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  • PILFERAGES 2014Our Books, Their Books

    A Quiz on Popular Fiction by

    VENKATESH SRINIVASAN and

    VIVEK KARTHIKEYAN

  • THIS QUIZ IS ABOUT

    James Joyce Hadley Chase

    Sidney Poitier Sheldon

    John Steinbeck Grisham

    Harold Pinter Robbins

    .

  • SOME GROUND RULES

    40 questions, all-written, for Teams of 2

    *-marked questions to resolve ties

    No negatives, please take guesses

    All parts carry one point each, a total of 54 points to be made

    Prizes for the Top 3 teams

  • 1.

    Ari Hiltunen is an author who has written a book that

    analyses what the great philosopher Aristotle was trying

    to say about the nature of drama and storytelling.

    According to one of his observations, Aristotle's concept

    of fear can best be understood by the word _______. The

    audience are aware of threatening danger and would like to

    warn the character but of course cannot do so.

    Fill in the blank with a word that is relevant to

    this quiz.

  • The Answer is.

  • Suspense

  • 2. Connect with an authors name.

  • The Answer is.

  • Ken Follett

    - Torus

    - The Man from St.. Petersburg

    - Hammer of Eden

    - Hornet Flight

  • 3. Identify the lady character from these three

    different depictions.

  • The Answer is.

  • Della Street

  • 4. Originally published in 1993, this set of books can be

    considered Indias first English crime fiction output.

    Identify the author, who has gone on to make a name

    for himself as a prolific writer in another genre, and as a

    TV series writer.

  • The Answer is.

  • Ashok Banker

  • *5. Identify the name of

    this magazine. Published

    continuously from 1924 to

    1995, it featured real-life crime

    and criminals. It also published

    work by authors like Dashiel

    Hammett. This two-word

    name has become familiar the

    world-over because of an

    unrelated hunt for a serial killer

    in Louisiana.

  • The Answer is.

  • True Detective

  • 6. Fill in the blanks in the last line of this book.

  • The Answer is.

  • Shall We Tell the President?

  • 7. Connect

  • The Answer is.

  • Alexander Mcall Smith

    - Author of #1 Ladies Detective Agency

    - Author of a new version of Emma

  • 8. Who is credited as

    the author in this

    re-imagination of his

    1975 work?

  • The Answer is.

  • Robert A Zimmerman (0.5 for Bob Dylan)

  • 9. This book reached the

    highest position for a debut

    author in the US bestseller

    list, since JK Rowling. The

    essential plot element is the

    alliterative condition suffered

    by the protagonist, Christine

    Lucas, similar to the

    condition suffered by a

    couple of Sanjays in

    Tamil/Hindi cinema. What?

  • The Answer is.

  • Anterograde Amnesia

  • *10. Which book is being reviewed?

    Forget the movie, forget handsome sexy Burt Lancaster and beauteous

    Deborah Kerr canoodling on the sand, forget another awful acting

    performance by ham-actor Frank Sinatra, forget the over-

    melodramatization by director Fred Zinnemann, this book is full of

    violence, boredom, drunkenness, suicide, gambling, whoring, existential

    crises, self-loathing, ugliness, and degradation in Hawaii in the months

    leading up to the attack on Pearl Harbor. And its long, 850 pages of the

    stuff, with an unrelenting style of malleable words in its narrative and

    dialogue. Reminded me a bit of Celine, unmitigated pressure, a cross

    between hell and purgatory set against the backdrop of paradise in the

    Hawaiian Islands. If Jones didnt have Dante in mind when he wrote this,

    Id be surprised.

  • The Answer is.

  • From Here to Eternity

  • 11. Piranha to Scurfy is the title of this collection of short

    stories by this famous British crime writer, published in

    2000. It is named after the first story in this collection, in

    which the protagonist is obsessed with finding factual

    mistakes in published books, and uses a number of

    reference books for the same. He also has a dominating

    mother, who in a fit of rage he kills using something he

    finds on his study table.

    Who is the author? What does the story title

    refer to?

  • The Answer is.

  • Ruth Rendell

    Volume of the Encyclopdia Britannica

  • 12. This is a 1983 film

    adaptation of a novel of the

    same name by which

    author?

    The same novel was adapted

    into a Hindi film that year.

    Which film?

  • The Answer is.

  • Eric Segal

    Masoom

  • 13. This is the first version of

    the book and was self-

    published by the author. After

    Westland acquired the rights

    to this and published it, what

    change happened, which is

    reflected in the newer

    version of the book and the

    authors subsequent books?

  • The Answer is.

  • Ashwin Sanghi reverted to his original name

  • 14. This is a 2013 film adaptation of the first book of

    which bestselling series (of 6 books)? Also, name the

    author.

  • The Answer is.

  • The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare

  • *15. Identify the speaker and the character being

    discussed.

  • The Answer is.

  • Robert Galbraith/JK Rowling

    Cormoran Strike

  • 16. The protagonist of this book cranks

    out penny dreadful prose, first in the

    form of a weekly newspaper serial called

    The Mysteries of _____ his

    hometown and later, under the

    pseudonym Ignatius B. Samson, in a

    monthly series of books entitled City of

    the Damned,. Published in Spanish and

    translated into English, the book follows a

    bestseller by the same author set in the

    same city, and is also centred around a

    book obtained from the Cemetery of

    Forgotten Books. Name the first book

    and the city the two books are set

    in.

  • The Answer is.

  • The Shadow of the Wind

    Barcelona

  • 17. Which author (writing

    under a pseudonym)? Which

    authors work is he reviving? The opening lines are, "It was one

    of those summer Tuesday

    afternoons when you begin to

    wonder if the earth has stopped

    revolving. The telephone on my

    desk had the look of something

    that knows it's being watched.

    Traffic trickled by in the street

    below, and there were a few

    pedestrians, too, men in hats going

    nowhere."

  • The Answer is.

  • John Banville

    Raymond Chandler

  • 18. VardiWaala Gunda starts with the corrupt activities of Inspector Deshraaj at Prataapgarh (a fictitious police station in a Southern state of India) where a foreign militant organization - Star Force has set terror for years. The militants get financial aid and arms (and of course, instructions) from their orgn. active in a neighbouring country - Sri Ganga. Star Force is planning to assassinate a popular leader - Chiranjeev Kumar upon whose instigation, the Indian armed forces had been sent to Sri Ganga to crush Star Force. How Chiranjeev Kumar is assassinated despite all his security arrangements, how Tejasvi himself becomes the next chief minister of the state, how he eradicates Star Force himself as well as reveals the true identity of Black Star and finally how himself gets killed afterwards, forms the remaining part of the novel.

    This is the synopsis of one of Indias best-selling pulp works, 1.5 Mncopies, in 1992. Who is the author and what is the book based on?

  • The Answer is.

  • Ved Prakash Sharma

    Assassination of Rajiv Gandhi by LTTE

  • 19. A graphic novel that was released to promote a 2012

    film, which was itself using the title of a 1977 film.

    Name the film / the protagonist of this novel.

  • The Answer is.

  • Agent Vinod

  • *20. Apparently considered by

    Agatha Christie as the

    sub-continents only original

    detective fiction writer, he

    wrote under the pen name that

    means son of the righteous.

    He has a 120-book work titled

    the Imran Series about Ali Imran,

    the secret chief of the Secret

    Service and another 125-book

    series called Jasoosi Duniya,

    which he wrote from 1952 to

    1979. Identify the author.

  • The Answer is.

  • Ibn-e-Safi (whose real name was Asrar Ahmed)

  • 21.

    In anatomy it is a small tubular gland, pit, or recess. Its

    other meaning of an underground room or vault beneath

    a church, used as a chapel or burial place, comes from the

    old Greek and Latin words for hidden.

    What is this term that is typically seen in horror

    anthologies?

  • The Answer is.

  • Crypt, from the Greek kryptos

    As in the1950s EC Comics series

  • 22.

    His varied journalistic assignments as a crime reporter inspired the Just Men series, and foreign correspondent assignments to places like the Belgian Congo triggered Sanders of the River.

    His novel, The Gaunt Stranger, was turned into a stage play by Sir Gerald who was the son of French novelist, artist and Punch illustrator Sir Georgefather of an equally accomplished Dame.

    Who is the writer, and which is the other famous family? (1 + 1)

  • The Answer is.

  • Edgar Wallace

    The du Mauriers

  • 23.

    Writing under the pseudonym Barnaby Ross, they

    created a fictional detectivea retired Shakespearian

    actor who left the theatre because he lost his sense of

    hearing.

    This characters name is also the name of a West End

    theatre site, possibly the oldest theatre site in the

    London still in use.

    For a point each, tell us who are Barnaby Ross

    and whats the name of the detective?

  • The Answer is.

  • Ellery Queen

    Drury Lane

  • 24.

    His is one of the first names that come to mind when thinking of pulpy novels, but his earlier ones were masterpieces. They include a heart-breaking 1951 story about the coming-of-age and misspent youth of a Jewish kid. This movie is based on the book.

    Name the author and the book. (1 + 1)

  • The Answer is.

  • *25.

    In this, his first appearance

    back in 1925, he solves a

    murder mystery in his own

    Honolulu. He doesnt speak

    his first words until page 82,

    and they are typically

    ungrammatical: No knife are

    present in neighbourhood of

    crime.

    Who?

  • The Answer is.

  • Charlie Chan

  • 26.

    C.W. Grafton, better known as Sue Graftons dad,

    embarked on one of detective fiction's most original

    title patterns with the critically acclaimed The Rat Began

    to Gnaw the Rope followed by The Rope Began to Hang

    the Butcher, a ten-volume series about a Kentucky

    Lawyer Gil Henry.

    That he stopped after just two volumes is regrettable.

    What would have been the title of the third book

    had he continued writing?

  • The Answer is.

  • The butcher began to kill the Ox

    Following the nursery rhyme:

    The rat began to gnaw the rope

    The rope began to hang the butcher

    The butcher began to kill the ox

    The ox began to drink the water

    The water began to quench the fire

    The fire began to burn the stick

  • 27.

    Who, talking about what in this paraphrased interview?

    There are several reasons. First, every ______ has a good story. We

    get involved with people who have messed up their lives, and their

    mistakes make fascinating stories. Street ______ see the underbelly

    of society. Corporate ______ see high-stakes shenanigans... ______

    think they can add a twist here and a subplot there and produce a

    real thriller. Second, most ______ would rather be doing something

    else. The profession is overcrowded and the competition is fierce.

    Most of the work is terribly boring. There is tremendous

    dissatisfaction within the profession, and almost every ______ I

    know is looking for a way out.

  • The Answer is.

  • John Grisham on the rash of lawyer-written

    suspense novels

  • 28.

    The basic plot is about an attorney who catches a rapist Max Cady in the act, testifies against him and is instrumental in Cady going to prison. Cady holds a deep grudge and after he gets out he stalks the lawyers family, and his vendetta escalates to killing anyone Cady thinks is close to the lawyer and his people.

    Based on a psychological thriller by John D MacDonald, the story was made into two movies carrying the same name, one each in 1962 and the other in 1991.

    What were they called?

  • The Answer is.

  • Cape Fear

  • 29.

    Settling down in the borderlands between North

    Carolina and Kentucky, the family divided into three

    clansSmoky Mountain, Cumberland Gap and

    Clinch Mountain.

    There is also the Flatland clan, but they make rare

    appearances. The Smoky Mountain breed produce some

    of the most memorable characters, including William Tell

    and his brothers Tyrel and Orrin.

    Who are we referring to?

  • The Answer is.

  • The Sacketts

    by Louis LAmour

  • *30. For one point each, name an author, a character (the

    first set of pics) and what connects him with the second

    set of pictures? (a few words in explanation)

  • The Answer is.

  • Tom Clancy

    Jack Ryan

    Ryan issued a foreign policy doctrine which largely

    defined his administration's international perspective,

    similar to the Monroe Doctrine

  • 31.

    Mr. Romance is a 2005 US reality TV show which aired

    on Oxygen. It was created by Gene Simmons and hosted

    by Fabio Lanzoni.

    It featured twelve contestants and each week they would

    take part in a series of events.

    What were the events, which would ultimately

    lead to a lucrative assignment as a grand prize?

  • The Answer is.

  • Photo-shoots for romance novel covers

  • 32.

    This book is based on two sources

    an account of a 10th-century Muslim

    who travels with a group of Vikings to

    their settlement, and a 3182-line-long

    work which is in a manuscript known

    as the Nowell Codex, located in the

    British Library.

    Which work, said to be the oldest

    such work that is still surviving,

    will one find in the Nowell Codex?

  • The Answer is.

  • Beowulf

  • 33.

    His first non-fiction work, The Sea Hunters, was

    released in 1996. The Board of Governors of the

    Maritime College, State University of New York,

    considered The Sea Hunters in lieu of a Ph.D. thesis and

    awarded him a Doctor of Letters degree in May, 1997.

    Which internationally recognized authority on

    shipwrecks wrote it?

  • The Answer is.

  • Clive Cussler

  • 34.

    The 1961 film adaptation of the book inspired the name

    of the series on the right. Which series that ran for a

    lengthy twelve years from 1984-96?

  • The Answer is.

  • Murder, She Wrote

  • *35.

    Connect the four movies.

  • The Answer is.

  • All based on works by Ira Levin

  • 36.

    Carrs mastery saw this novel selected as the best of all time by a panel of writers.

    This book could also be used as a tutorial. In Chapter 17, Dr Gideon Fell, a detective gives an extensive explanation of the nuances of something which many writers have tried to master.

    What circumstances that are also seen in Dorothy L. Sayers's Have His Carcase and Georgette Heyer'sEnvious Casca among others?

  • The Answer is.

  • Locked Room Mystery

  • 37.

    An author and his character cannot have a more

    prominent resemblance to each other, than these two.

    Was the hero made after his own image, we dont know.

    Name both (1 + 1).

  • The Answer is.

  • George Simenon and Inspector Maigret

  • 38.

    In 1984, when a new wing was proposed for the National

    Gallery of London, Prince Charles is said to have

    remarked that it was a monstrous _________ on the

    face of a much-loved and elegant friend, likening it to a

    large boil, infected and with pus.

    This meaning of the word comes from the fact that the

    boil looks like an unfaceted stone, of which we are all

    familiar with a specimen in a cooler shade.

    What word?

  • The Answer is.

  • Carbuncle

  • 39.

    What thorough entertainment started in 1955 with

    the one on the left and ended with the one on the right

    in 1986?

  • The Answer is.

  • Alistair MacLean books

  • *40.

    The link between violence and X was established in the mid-19th century, for the simple reason that they (X) became available only in that time period. An early example is Xavier de Montepins narration in P.L.M. Rigoloin 1886.

    Belle Epoque crime stories often hesitated to make the link, because they did not want to risk implicating a symbol of progress and modernity with nefarious circumstances.

    What was this link that some writers loved?

  • The Answer is.

  • Mysteries on trains