MUTINY – an apt title?

Mutiny /ˈmjuːtɪni/

~ an open rebellion against the proper authorities, especially by sailors against their officers. A mutiny by those in control could trigger a global war ~

This preface to MUTINY fits the plot well, but it also suits the-plot. MUTINY has more than one ‘rebellion against the proper authorities’ as our protagonist faces his failure and the demise of a thankless career. You see, as age creeps up on us all there is a greater need for affirmation. MUTINY takes place around the Christmas season – a time of reflection, sharing and rejoicing. But, it can be a lonely time too. I remember just a few Christmas’s ago, when feeling a bit down, I received a very kind note from a student I had taught many years before. His email thanked me for being an inspiration for his learning and hoped I was doing well. You can imagine my joy at the encouragement? Sir Christopher Jenson – the protagonist in MUTINY – may be my alter-ego? Perhaps, though Sir Christopher is single and I am married. Though, I admit, it was easy to write MUTINY from Sir Christopher’s POV – we are of similar age and we have both been to most of the locations that crop up in MUTINY. Furthermore, while writing MUTINY, I could identify with Sir Christopher’s character – at times, he became an extension of myself. Yet, he retained his own fears and faults and eventually retired into obscurity with a new name, new future and, it appears, a new passion. My alter-ego may yet be revived in a follow-up thriller, so watch this space.

Freedom

The more social controls we put upon people, the greater the cry for freedom, but what does freedom really look like? Freedom is a recurring theme in MUTINY and reference is made, in Chapter 25, to Big Brother from George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty Four:

Nineteen Eighty Four

[Michael clears his throat. “In his 1949 novel – NINETEEN EIGHTY FOUR – George Orwell feared a Big Brother who would control us all, even our thoughts. I’m afraid we have arrived at the gates to this Orwellian world and are mesmerized by distractions that disguise what is really happening to us. The very foundations of society are crumbling.”]

A parallel to 1984 is the life of the protagonist, Sir Christopher Jenson. He seems to have lost his career mojo and, when an investigation goes awry, he is more than willing to change. And, so are a few other characters and I think this ‘freedom’ theme helps create several layers in MUTINY.

Orwell’s predictions are rapidly finding fulfilment in society today, aided by many geo-political conflicts. Yet, in the midst of these, MUTINY is able to finish on a positive note – one that leaves Sir Christopher with a sense of hope and love. Was it planned that way or did it just ‘happen.’ Perhaps the readers will find the answer.