Friday, 4 February 2005

'Copycat' writer sticks to her story, Jessica Adams, The Australian, 4 February, 2005.

`Copycat' writer sticks to her story: [1 All-round Country Edition]

John Stapleton, Rebecca VonhoffThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 04 Feb 2005: 3.

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WRITER and astrologer Jessica Adams was guilty of plagiarism for ripping off an Agatha Christie short story, literary critics said yesterday.
In what is shaping as Australia's newest literary scandal, one critic said her dog could spot the similarities after comparing Adams's story The Circle with the 1928 Christie work The Idol House of Astarte.
She said Adams possibly "had a memory of the Christie story motivating her but as she wrote her own story she might not have noticed how powerful or concentrated that memory was".



Rebecca Vonhoff 
John Stapleton
Murray Waldren
PROMINENT literary critics have slammed well known author and astrologist Jessica Adams as a plagiarist in Australia's latest literary scandal.
Striking similarities were exposed by The Australian yesterday between a story written by Adams and a story written 77 years earlier by the world's best selling author Agatha Christie.
Adams's story The Circle, published in the latest issue of the fundraising magazine for homeless people the Big Issue, tells a tale of mystery, murder and the supernatural which focuses on a beautiful woman suspected of murdering a property owner in a circle of trees. As does a story by the best selling novelist of all time Agatha Christie called The Idol House of Astarte, published in 1928.
Novelist and critic Debra Adelaide said ``my dog could tell it's plagiarism''. ``It takes my breath away, it is just so obvious,'' Dr Adelaide said. ``It is startling to read this. So much has been taken, the actual structure is the same. I hate to think that another author has done this deliberately. I know Agatha Christie's story might be more than 70 years old, but you do not steal from another person's work.''
Agent at Australian Literary Management Lyn Tranter described the coincidences between the two works as ``absolutely extraordinary''.
``It is a complete and utter rip-off. I've never seen anything like it. There's the same characters, same character development, same structure, exactly the  same murder and the same resolution. I mean, it's absolutely mind-blowing. How she thought she'd get away with it, I don't know. It's absolute plagiarism. I'd bank my reputation on it.''
But in a statement issued yesterday Jessica Adams said she had never read the Agatha Christie sotry before the charges emerged, much less copied it. ``It is frankly terrifying to be accused of copying an Agatha Christie by her ardent fans,'' said Adams. ``Who knows where such an author will end up? Lead piping, nooses in the library, butlers with candlesticks in all the wrong places - I imagine nothing is too much for them. I am mystified - in a Whodunnit kind of way - by any comparison being made between the two stories.''
Her literary agent Fioina Inglis at Curtis Brown said there were only so many stories to tell, and coincidenetal similarities of character and narrative structure do occur. ``In a real case of plagiarism you would find identical passages, the prose would be hardly changed. This is clearly not the case with Jessica's story.''
One of Australia's leading literary commentators Helen Elliott said ``prima facie, this certainly looks like simple plagiarism...but plagiarism is anything but simple.
She said possibly Jessica Adams ``had a memory of the Christie story motivating her but as she wrote her own story she might not have noticed how powerful, or concentrated that memory was.''
Ms Elliott said plagiarism was far too serious a concern for a professional writer to disregard.
``Adams simply would not have sat down with the Christie on her desk and copied, especially with such a well-known Christie story  unless, she was having a nervous breakdown,'' she said.
Other industry experts were also forgiving. The 2004 Critic of the Year Peter Craven said he could not see what the fuss was about. He said while Agatha Christie may have been an unconscious influence and ``there is a family resemblance between the two stories'' and he saw ``no direct evidence of plagiarism.''
HarperCollins Fiction Publisher Linda Funnell said with questions of plagiarism the question of intent is everything. ``In terms of plot lines, there's nothing new under the sun,'' she said.
Bruce Wolpe, spokesman for Fairfax, publishers of Jessica Adams astrology column, said they would not be commenting on the issue. Intellectual Property specialists Chorion purchased 64% of Agatha Christie Ltd in 1998. A spokeswoman said they were seeking advice from their UK Head Office.

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