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Mal Peet, RIP

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AgentPete

Capo Famiglia
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This has been a difficult day. My friend, my client, Mal Peet, died last night.

Mal was – and it seems almost obscene to use the past tense – the writer’s writer. An incredibly accomplished word technician, held in equal parts awe, esteem and affection by his peers.

The man and the writer were inseparable – and as a man, he was warm-hearted, impishly witty, generous to a fault and impossible not to like. Make that love. Impossible not to love.

I don’t know what else to say at the moment, except for one thing.

A strange thing; a thread that connected us.

I read Mal’s LIFE: AN EXPLODED DIAGRAM only after taking him on as a client. Before that, I knew nothing of the book’s contents.

Mal, like me, had grown up in a remote part of Norfolk. LIFE is probably the most autobiographical of all his works, and it is set there.

As I read it, I became aware that one of the book’s characters – minor, but significant in plot terms – could only have been my own long-dead father.

We had dinner. He confirmed that the art teacher he had so deftly defined was indeed my father.

I don’t know what the chances of that happening are – impossible to calculate.

But there it was: a bond, a thread of connection. Now undone.

Or maybe not.

I want to say more, but that’s it for me today. My thoughts now are with Mal’s family who, like the rest of us, have been untimely robbed of a great soul.
 
This has been a difficult day. My friend, my client, Mal Peet, died last night.

Mal was – and it seems almost obscene to use the past tense – the writer’s writer. An incredibly accomplished word technician, held in equal parts awe, esteem and affection by his peers.

The man and the writer were inseparable – and as a man, he was warm-hearted, impishly witty, generous to a fault and impossible not to like. Make that love. Impossible not to love.

I don’t know what else to say at the moment, except for one thing.

A strange thing; a thread that connected us.

I read Mal’s LIFE: AN EXPLODED DIAGRAM only after taking him on as a client. Before that, I knew nothing of the book’s contents.

Mal, like me, had grown up in a remote part of Norfolk. LIFE is probably the most autobiographical of all his works, and it is set there.

As I read it, I became aware that one of the book’s characters – minor, but significant in plot terms – could only have been my own long-dead father.

We had dinner. He confirmed that the art teacher he had so deftly defined was indeed my father.

I don’t know what the chances of that happening are – impossible to calculate.

But there it was: a bond, a thread of connection. Now undone.

Or maybe not.

I want to say more, but that’s it for me today. My thoughts now are with Mal’s family who, like the rest of us, have been untimely robbed of a great soul.
Whoa. Chills. What an amazing connection you shared. I am sorry for your loss.
 
Sorry to hear that Pete, 67 is still too young, but seems like he had an interesting and productive life. May he R.I.P.
 
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Oh, no.
Too soon.
All that vim.

And a strange story, Peter, but maybe not so strange in some ways; bonds don't ever fully break on the real Web.
 
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I never knew of the man, I'm sorry to say, but any loss can be devastating. My deepest condolences to all friends and family.
 
Very sorry to hear that, Pete. I saw him on TV only a few weeks ago, he looked so well.
 
I am so grateful to have met/interviewed Mal in November only a few weeks before his initial diagnosis. Such a fun, lighthearted show, due in no small part to the rapport he shared with Agent Pete. (http://litopia.com/world-according-mal-peet/)
Mal's take on social media? "I fucking hate it."
Personally, I found his indignation inspirational, along with his career as a writer. He found success later in life and the fact he was stalked and poached by Pete is proof to me that-- even in the digital age-- cream rises.
Screen Shot 2015-03-07 at 4.26.28 PM.png
He will be missed.
 
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