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Daniel Carney
Personal details
Born (1944-08-08)8 August 1944
Beirut, Lebanon
Died 6 January 1987(1987-01-06) (aged 42)
Harare, Zimbabwe
Nationality Rhodesian
Occupation Fiction writer

Daniel Carney (8 August 1944 – 6 January 1987) was a Rhodesian novelist.[1] Three of his novels have been made into films. Carney was a brother of Erin Pizzey, a British writer and feminist activist.[2]

Biography[]

Daniel Carney was born in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1944, a son of a British diplomat.[3] In 1963, he settled in Southern Rhodesia (soon to be renamed Rhodesia) and joined the British South Africa Police (BSAP), where he served for three and a half years. In 1968, he co-founded the estate agents Fox and Carney in Salisbury, Rhodesia. He died of cancer in 1987.[4]

After his death, ownership rights in his novels and the films based on them passed to his family.[citation needed] The family have consistently withheld permission to reproduce Daniel's novels, and have opposed re-release or sales of the movies based on the novels.[citation needed] In 2005, Tango Entertainment released a 30th-anniversary edition of The Wild Geese (1978). The film had been hampered by the collapse of its American distributor, Allied Artists. As a result, the film was only partially distributed in the United States, where it was a box-office disappointment, despite being the 13th-highest-grossing film, worldwide, of 1978.[citation needed]

Published works[]

  • The Whispering Death (1969). Transworld Publishers Limited. 1980. ISBN 0-552-11353-0.  Set in Rhodesia, the book was adapted as a 1976 movie titled Whispering Death, a.k.a. Night of the Askaris, Death in the Sun, and Albino.[5]
  • The Wild Geese (1977). Corgi. 1978. ISBN 0-552-10869-3.  (Originally titled The Thin White Line.) Set in the Congo, it was adapted as the film The Wild Geese (1978), with a screenplay by Reginald Rose (author of 12 Angry Men).[6]
  • Under a Raging Sky (1980).  Set in Rhodesia, its film rights were optioned by Euan Lloyd, producer of The Wild Geese and Wild Geese II, but the project was not filmed.[7]
  • The Square Circle (1982). Bantam Books. July 1987. ISBN 0-553-25380-8.  Set in Germany and republished as The Wild Geese II and The Return of the Wild Geese, the novel was adapted as a movie titled Wild Geese II (1985).[8]
  • Macau (1985). D.I. Fine. 1985. ISBN 0-917657-10-1.  is set in Macau.

References[]

  1. "Writer Carney Dead at Age 42". 1987-01-09. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gw0xAAAAIBAJ&pg=6359,6402758. 
  2. "We gave women back a sense of self". 29 March 2004. http://www.richmondandtwickenhamtimes.co.uk/news/474992.print/. 
  3. "Daniel Carney". http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/128299.Daniel_Carney. Retrieved 6 September 2016. 
  4. OBITUARY Moncur, Andrew. The Guardian (1959–2003) [London (UK)], 10 January 1987: 32.
  5. "The Night of the Askari". 1 February 1978. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074108/. Retrieved 6 September 2016. 
  6. "The Wild Geese". 11 November 1978. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0078492/. Retrieved 6 September 2016. 
  7. "The Euan Lloyd Interview Part 1". 
  8. "Wild Geese II". 18 October 1985. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090323/. Retrieved 6 September 2016. 

External links[]

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