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Rankin gets write idea to please fans at festival for all

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Published Date:
04 August 2007
FANS of Ian Rankin's best-selling Rebus crime series will hear an exclusive extract from the final book at the Edinburgh People's Festival.
The Edinburgh author and comedian Elaine C Smith are backing this year's five-day event, which was formed as a protest against "expensive" shows at the International Festival.

Venues include the city's estates, and even Saughton Prison, to deliver the arts to people who feel the Festival is just for the tourists.

The People's Festival starts on Sunday with the Rebus tour leaving from St Leonard's police station, where DI John Rebus is based in Rankin's novels.

Rankin has given tour guide Colin Brown a two-page extract from his final novel on the heavy-drinking detective, which is due out later this year. The author said: "If you live in Edinburgh you can feel that the city belongs to someone else during the Festival.

"A lot of Edinburgh people just put their heads down and get on with it, which is a shame.

"It's great that local areas in Edinburgh can have their own festival and can piggy-back on the big Festival.

Rankin - who will also be reading extracts from the final Rebus novel at the Edinburgh International Book Festival - added: "I've given Colin a couple of bits I'm not using, so if people go on his tour then come to my reading, eventually they'll be able to piece together the book."

Set up in 1951, the People's Festival was re-launched in 2002 by Scottish Socialist Party leader Colin Fox.

He said: "We want it to be for the people, by the people. The main criticism the Edinburgh People's Festival has of the Festival is that it's too expensive, it all takes place in the city centre and is no longer aimed at the people here. A Ricky Gervais ticket at £37.50 is scandalous.

"Our attitude is that we take the People's Festival into where the others don't go."

A debate on whether an independent Scotland would be artistically and culturally better off will be held on Wednesday in the Out of the Blue Arts Centre in Dalmeny Street.

The arts impresario Richard Demarco, Edinburgh University rector Mark Ballard and comedian Elaine C Smith, left, will be on the panel.

Mr Demarco

said: "I've always thought that the Edinburgh Festival should involve every citizen in Edinburgh and I have made every effort to do that over the years.

"I have had a dream that the Festival should inspire and be of educational value to people who normally imagine that it is not for them. I would like to see every street and every shop window festooned with flags and bunting."

Stand-up comedian Raymond Mearns and the Lynsey Dolan Band will be entertaining inmates at Saughton Prison on Tuesday.

A spokesman for the Scottish Prison Service welcomed the event. He said: "Prisons seek to play an active role in the communities in which they are located."

A comedy night will take place on Thursday at the BMC Club in Gorgie, while a play called Marilyn Painted Pictures will follow on Friday in Dalkeith Arts Centre.

For more information visit www.edinburghpeoplesfestival.org.uk

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  • Last Updated: 04 August 2007 10:35 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Ian Rankin and Rebus
 
1

Boy Wonder,

04/08/2007 11:54:20

We go for a few days without mention of the EN/Hootsmon's favoured "writer" and suddenly WHAM!!! Two articles in one day! On behalf of the public, I demand to know which reporter/editor/owner he's sleeping with!!!

2

Saz,

04/08/2007 12:04:52

Quite right the man gets a mention he's talent that Edinburgh should be proud of and a decent genuine guy!

3

AD in sunny Livingston,

04/08/2007 12:11:20

#2 He wasn't born in Edinburgh

4

Tam O' Shanter,

04/08/2007 12:12:49

#2
We're tired of his constant thirst for publicity.

5

Saz,

04/08/2007 12:32:23

#3 I didn't say he was from Edinburgh

#4 The media recognises his talent, it's not his thirst for publicity at all.

6

GorgieRepublic,

04/08/2007 13:09:58

Don't see what the problem is with Ian being mentioned here again - as someone who has worked in the booktrade for years I know that as well at the actual writing authors today have to work pretty hard to publicise their work. Ian's put a lot of work into this as well as his actual writing, making him and Rebus popular first here in the city, then Scotland, then a UK bestseller and then international over the years. And that reflects well on the city, which he also promotes as he often talks about our rich literary history. Good on him.

7

Whiskey,

04/08/2007 13:22:28

Right on #2.....regardless of his birthplace he's put Edinburgh on the map!!!

8

alex paterson,

embra 04/08/2007 13:26:24

#1 you have never said a more truer word,almost made it.

9

nell from falkirk,

04/08/2007 14:31:21

And another chance for a crummy pun in a headline.

10

Robert Zimmerman,

Mary Doll's Govan 04/08/2007 16:37:00

Why nae quote from the lovely Mary Doll? Elaine C. Smith is mentioned thrice and that's it. Rab would tell you this, boy...

11

Bien E. Bien,

04/08/2007 16:49:21

#7 - are you suggesting that noone had heard of Edinburgh before Ian Rankin used it as the setting for his Rebus novels?

12

Boy Wonder,

04/08/2007 18:04:37

Dinnae gie's it, #7 Whiskey .... Edinburgh was on the map HUNDREDS of years before that talentless twit was born!!! The City has NEVER relied on ANY single individual for that!

Now go away and learn the history of the great capital!

13

Catharine,

Winnipeg, Canada 04/08/2007 21:01:57

Unlike so many snooty "I'm famous now" people, Ian Rankin still trundles about the world, coming to even the most out-of-the-way wee bookshops for signings and is a friendly fellow to speak with. I love Edinburgh with or without Ian Rankin, but you need to understand that he, and fellow authors Quentin Jardin and Alexander McCall Smith, have introduced that grand old capital to a whole generation of people - particularly North Americans. Now, many of the posters on this site are very xenophobic, I know, but like us or hate us, we tourists bring a whole lot of money into Edinburgh and the rest of Scotland. Some of us even want to emigrate!

14

nell from falkirk,

04/08/2007 22:43:04

#13 Boy - 1) read #14 (in a Canadian accent for full favour)(or that of thon wifie from "Murder She Wrote", close enough)(or any other similar with that particular type of hectoring jollity found only in North American ladies of a certain age)
2)place special emphasis on the phrase "that grand old capital", realising she probably means it
3) realise Ian Rankin has given you one more reason to detest him...

15

Illegal alien,

04/08/2007 23:47:19

Oh for Christs sake.

16

Boy Wonder,

05/08/2007 08:08:37

#17. Not when it comes to Ranker the *anker!!!

17

Boy Wonder,

05/08/2007 19:55:26

You really have come in late, haven't you Foggy???

I suggest you look up previous postings in older editions of the Hootsmon, Evening Hootsmon and Hootsmon on Sunday!

18

Friend-at-large,

On a shore, lecturing sea gulls on nutrition. 06/08/2007 07:44:03

Ian Rankin takes a great deal of care to craft characters who develop from novel to novel and his police settings and procedural details are true to life. I respect his skill and energy.

19

The La Gomera Ashley Nicole Hilton Fan Club,

06/08/2007 07:46:56

Ian Rankin is easily in the top ten Airport book authors worldwide.

I dont begrudge him his success, and enjoy his books occasionaly , with the local flavour an all.

I just dont need an Ian Rankin special every blinking day in the Edinburgh Evening News..

20

The Daleks,

06/08/2007 08:05:00

Hurray!!!!

Ian Rankin's back!!!

I know the great Lord Foulkes of Numptyton was trying to take his place as the Hootsmon's darling, but there's only one publicity seeker for me!!!


 

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Today's Vote

Is Ian Rankin right to praise author Katie Price (Jordan) for boosting literacy?
Yes - she must be raising reading levels if people are buying her books
No - I've seen better literature on the back of a bus ticket
Errr... I only bought mine to look at the pictures

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