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Kill For Love

Page 31

by Ray Connolly


  Bill Hallsden had asked for respect and consideration for his family on this day, but, in view of what had happened in London, the story was just too good. Romsey was hit once again by a minor media fest.

  Donna’s friends, Jenny and Ali, sat towards the back of the church. They were given no say in what music was played. They hadn’t asked for it. The little service ended with the hymn Morning Has Broken, after which Donna was buried in the church cemetery, about fifty yards from the grave of her boy friend Rick Niemen. The Niemen family didn’t attend the funeral.

  THE END

  Also by Ray Connolly

  Novels

  A Girl Who Came To Stay

  That’ll Be The Day

  Stardust

  Trick Or Treat?

  Newsdeath

  A Sunday Kind Of Woman

  The Sun Place

  Sunday Morning

  Shadows On A Wall

  Love Out Of Season

  Let Nothing You Dismay (anthology of short stories)

  Other Books

  John Lennon 1940-1980

  Stardust Memories (anthology of own journalism)

  In The Sixties (anthology of Sixties journalism)

  The Ray Connolly Beatles Archive (anthology of Beatles journalism)

  Screenplays for Film and Television

  That’ll Be The Day

  Stardust

  Honky Tonk Heroes (TV series)

  Forever Young

  Lytton’s Diary (TV series)

  Defrosting The Fridge

  Perfect Scoundrels (TV series)

  Documentaries

  James Dean: The First American Teenager

  The Rhythm Of Life (co-writer TV series)

  Radio Plays

  An Easy Game To Play

  Lost Fortnight

  Tim Merryman’s Days Of Clover (series)

  Unimaginable

  God Bless Our Love

  About the Author

  Ray Connolly has written widely on popular music and popular culture. The award winning screenwriter of the movie Stardust, he also wrote the film That’ll Be The Day, the television series Lytton’s Diary and Perfect Scoundrels, and wrote and directed the documentary James Dean: the First American Teenager.

  A biographer of John Lennon, he is also the author of ten novels. His most recent, Love Out Of Season (“…funny, charming and compassionate, successfully transposes the conventions of Shakespearian comedy to the 21st Century” - Mail On Sunday) was adapted for BBC Radio, while Shadows On A Wall, a novel about an out of control film production on location with a ballooning budget, was described in the Sunday Express as “probably the best novel on movie-making ever written”.

  As a journalist he has written for the London Evening Standard, The Times, The Observer, The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Times and the Daily Mail. He is married and lives in London.

 

 

 


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