y separately published work icon Fortress single work   novel   crime  
First known date: 1980 Issue Details: First known date: 1980... 1980 Fortress
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'Forcibly taken from their remote one-room schoolhouse and held captive by three grotesquely masked kidnappers, Sally James and her young charges wage a fierce and violent battle for their lives.' 

Source: ABE Books https://bit.ly/3grE136

Adaptations

form y separately published work icon Fortress Everett de Roche , ( dir. Arch Nicholson ) Australia : Crawford Productions , 1987 6054986 1987 single work film/TV crime thriller

'On a lazy day at Sunday Flat in rugged mountain country in Northern Victoria, Sally Jones and her class are looking forward to the few remaining days to the end of term. Pleasant anticipation turns to stark horror as four grotesquely masked men descend on Sally and the children and whisk them away at gunpoint. A damp and dark cave becomes prison for Sally and her nine young charges until they manage to grope their way to freedom by way of an underwater exit. Their new found freedom, however, is short-lived as their captors are waiting for them at a nearby farmhouse, where they have overpowered the old farmer and his wife. The comic masks of the kidnappers cannot hide their brutal nature as the children are manhandled and the old lady is viciously attacked. In protective defiance, the farmer puts up a brave struggle and is fatally shot. With blood on their hands, the gunmen lock Sally and the children in an old shed. A shotgun blast echoes through the stillness of the night. The old lady too, has been callously murdered. Now Sally has no illusions as to their probable fate. They must escape at any cost. Only one man has been left to guard them and the children devise a plan to lure him into the shed. Thanks to Narelle’s feminine charms and Sid’s piece of fencepost, they are soon free and run into the night. Stumbling and clawing their way forward with no sense of direction and ever fearful of the nearness of their oppressors, they at last find shelter…a cave to use as a makeshift camp. Hungry and frightened, they settle for an uneasy night. Morning brings the shock realisation that the kidnappers have found them. The taunting voices of their pursuers cut through the chill of early dawn. “We’re coming to get you!” With time running out, they must convert the cave into a fortress of sorts. A pooling of potential weapons sees a pathetic arsenal of penknives, sharpened pencils, scissors, a tomahawk…and a bayonet, while Derek fashions primitive spears from saplings. The older boys then busy themselves positioning the spears and the bottom of the ditch-moat in front of the cave. Leaves and branches provide camouflage. The unwelcome mat is ready for the kidnappers. Now, Sally and the children can only wait - and hope… When Narelle wanders from the cave, Sally makes a fanatic search for her. She is confronted by one of the gunmen and a desperate struggle develops. The kidnapper topples into the moat and meets an agonising death when spears impale him. Only the last and most feared of the abductors remains and the group readies itself for a final stand. On finding his accomplice dead, the man charges the cave in a rage, but is overpowered and beaten to death. Back in the familiar surrounds of the schoolhouse, Sally and the children are reticent to elaborate on their ordeal. The inquiring Police fail to notice the interest the pupils are showing in a jar of formaldehyde, containing a large bleached object. If one cannot understand the criminal mind, perhaps it is better to analyse his heart.'

Source: Crawford Productions (http://www.crawfords.com.au/libary/movie/fortress.shtml). (Sighted: 14/6/2013)

Notes

  • Adapted for the 1986 telemovie Fortress directed by Arch Nicholson. Screenplay by Everett de Roche.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Form: audiobook
Form: audiobook

Other Formats

  • Also braille, large print.

Works about this Work

Queen of Crime Frances Whiting , 2003 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Sunday Mail , 28 September 2003; (p. 51)
I Wish I'd Written That : Gabrielle Lord on Jaws by Peter Benchly Gabrielle Lord , 2001 single work essay
— Appears in: Crime Factory , no. 2 2001; (p. 64)
An Interview with Gabrielle Lord Peter Pierce (interviewer), 1999 single work interview
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , October vol. 19 no. 2 1999; (p. 196-202)
The Fiction of Gabrielle Lord Peter Pierce , 1999 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , October vol. 19 no. 2 1999; (p. 186-195)
Fortress Peter Pierce , 1999 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Country of Lost Children : An Australian Anxiety 1999; (p. 168-172)
Merging the Jigsaw Pieces of Perception Helen Daniel , 1980 single work review
— Appears in: The Age , 25 October 1980;

— Review of Fortress Gabrielle Lord , 1980 single work novel
Queen of Crime Frances Whiting , 2003 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Sunday Mail , 28 September 2003; (p. 51)
The Fiction of Gabrielle Lord Peter Pierce , 1999 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , October vol. 19 no. 2 1999; (p. 186-195)
An Interview with Gabrielle Lord Peter Pierce (interviewer), 1999 single work interview
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , October vol. 19 no. 2 1999; (p. 196-202)
Christmas Presents for Some Well-Known Australian Authors Geoffrey Dutton , 1986 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Australian Literary Magazine , 20-21 December 1986; (p. 6)
Apocalypse: Sydney 2075 Susan Chenery , 1990 single work criticism biography
— Appears in: The Sunday Herald , 12 August 1990; (p. 35)
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