Christmas Pic. For Twitchers (&...
Twitching & Birdwatching0 min ago
Thought that maybe Miss Thompson could do with a fresh start, it being thjrown into further debate every time a new question comes in. Found this site to just confuse the issue further or maybe raise the question of whether both popular answers should be accepted.
sprg.ssl.berkeley.edu/~jmcd/book/revs2/toal.html - 4k
No best answer has yet been selected by Del424. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.sprg.ssl.berkeley.edu/~jmcd/book/revs2/toal.html - 4k -Cached - Similar pages
Links are not working tonight.
I was reading a review of Trembling of a Leaf and it merely serves to confuse the issue further.
"Finally, "Rain" is an excellent and fairly well-known story, in which Maugham takes us to Pago-pago where he ravishes the notion of the holy missionary (a figure prevalent in the history of South Pacific islands). The story (also entitled "Miss Thompson" or "Sadie Thompson") springs from actual events he witnessed, and has been made into no fewer than three movies. It is disturbing, and wonderfully evokes the wet sultry nights in the islands".
However, despite my support all week for 'Miss Thompson' I think we shall be going with 'Rain'.
http://www.greatposters.com/hayworth.html
Found this site which gives the answer as the film being based on "Rain"
http://members.tripod.com/~claudia79/sadie.html
Just to confuse things even more, this one says the book is Miss Thompson and that the film is based on a stage play called Rain.
I think we should all bow down and thank Silly Moo for actuallu having a copy of this book. It would be difficult for Vic and Dave to claim that the actual book was wrong. We can look at web sites, literary campanions and encyclopaedia's until we are blue in the face but none can be more help than a copy of the book.
Thanks Silly Moo.