Tuesday 18 December 2012

A ROOM AT MRS RAJALAXMI'S




         The infinite is apparent, but not in this sleep. AWAKEN! To see it, unfortunately, might be more a question of steering alongside death. It might be the place where the One becomes the Other: it happened to me.
         Mahaballipuram is a small resort town on the Tamil Nadu coast, south of Madras, something of a hippie paradise in the sixties. One of its biggest claims to fame is that The Beatles stayed there during their flirtation with Hinduism, or rather, with the Maharishi.
         It's still quiet now, expanding, more of a tourist trap (the shopkeepers are getting desperate: in that respect it's not too far from Agra), but the sea is as rough as it ever was. It's got something against the beach, an attitude problem, your Californian might say. The killing spirit resides there, and it's carrying a temper.
         The shore temples have been barricaded against nature, and this doesn't help much; they're not the same at all. Thousands of years on the beach didn't seem to do them much harm; now they're "protected" there are more visitors, more footsteps; the wear and tear is grinding the old place into the ground.
         I got a room in the Five Rathas village, just south of the town, in a row of thatched mud and brick huts next to the home of Mrs. Rajalaxmi and her family. There was one window, but all I could see from it was a wall. Despite it being October, the heat was stifling, the mosquitoes fierce. They say a dying man has more desire to procreate than he ever did before, as a kind of preservation instinct. The species must grow, must continue. Well, the mosquitoes were like that. Winter, of sorts, approaching, they wanted blood, and they wanted it now.
         There was a bed. More of a charpoy, let's say an amalgamation of the two. With a net, a small table in the corner, and a door. The pillow was thuggish.
         Everywhere in Mahaballipuram the sound is one of chipping: hundreds of stone carvers are busy chiselling at blocks of stone night and day, they never let up. The streets are lined with stalls groaning under the weight of Ganeshas. There are bronze Shivas too, made with the age old lost-wax process. Nothing changes here, when you get down to it.
         The third day there I got ill, and I think I might have died were it not for... well, I don't know what. This is what happened:
         It was getting hotter, the monsoon had been dragging on, loathe to finish. I awoke in the night, my dreams getting more disturbing. Lying on my back, something wet was running down my neck. In a semi-sleep state I must have wiped whatever it was away with the back of my hand. But it continued. A slow trickle of liquid down my neck. Like thick warm oil. And the dreams got worse, until I got confused about what was real, and what was sleep. To this day, I'm still troubled by this problem. I never know if I'm awake, or in bed, at night, dreaming. Always it turns out that I'm awake, but I'd like more proof sometimes.
         In the morning, despite there being brilliant sunshine outside, the hut was in darkness. The only things discernible were corners, some more obvious shapes. Only when I opened the door and let light flood in with a tidal belch did I discover the meaning of the night's occurrence. The pillow, formerly a whitish grey cotton, was now a crimson swab lying at the head of the bed, looking like it had been done over by a hit squad of angry Sicilians. It was soaked through with blood, a delta like a big flat poppy imprinted on its cloth, and the left side of my neck was red also.
         From there I don't remember shutting the door, or indeed recollect anything of the rest of that day. I simply remember it being night, and the dreams that went with it were raging.
         A steady trickle of blood leaked from my ear until morning. And only when I awoke did I remember the dream, though when I tried to come to terms with it, to write it down if not on paper then at least on a page my mind had set aside for it, I found that I could not.
         What had happened to me though, in the night, was a vision of another dimension: one where the senses, that is, those things which make us alive, make us what we are, were all described, all existed to me as geometry. Yes, it's impossible to describe to you (if it was possible to do so, then surely the experience could not have been supra-dimensional?), but try and imagine, if you can.
         I was hearing, smelling, tasting, touching, in geometry. It was a language alone, every part of my being, restricted as it was by lying prostrate, fevered, in a bed, in darkness, everything I was, had been and ever should be, ever could be, ever would be, transliterated into a language of geometrical shapes and calculations.
         I remember reaching out and striking the wooden frame of the bed: the nervous process of instructing the muscle to move, the reaching out, the sensate touching of the wood, all of this was geometry. Such a wonderful thing!
         And in the night, after the fever had subsided a little, when I'd regained my usual hold on the world, there was a disturbance outside the window. I could only hear the commotion: wailing, screaming, great distress in the next hut just across the way. I presumably fell asleep again, unaware of the blooding taking place.
         When I awoke I knew I was physically ill: blood was still trickling from one ear, my temperature must have been over 100°, and as soon as Mr. Rajalaxmi set eyes on me he commanded his son to run me to the doctor in town on the back of his bicycle. I walked to the bike lopsidedly as my balance was affected, and stuck out from the machine at a forty five degree angle, like the broken indicator of a Morris Minor. We rode through the main street with Indians waving and laughing at us, the spokes of the wheels nipping at my toes, which were poking out like whelks from the blue shell of my flip-flops.
         The doctor let me jump the queue (I think it was obstetrics  day), had a quick look at my ears and my throat, listened to my chest briefly then sold me some tablets for 200 rupees.
         Later, Mr. Rajalaxmi told me that in the night the man living in the next house had been out drinking with his friends, and coming home, drunk, they'd spotted a young cobra at the side of the road. The man had gone over to it and tried to catch hold of the thing, like it was a kitten or a chicken, and the cobra had, understandably, struck, biting him on the hand. His friends had panicked: instead of getting someone to drive him straight to Madras for medical treatment (all hospitals in India keep antidote for snake venom) they had simply tried sucking out the poison, a process which simply helps disperse the poison, spreading it.
         With a cobra bite, there is a forty minute window to get treatment; after that you die. The man's clock ticked, ticked, ticked, and he died.
         Later still that day, after Mr. Rajalaxmi had made me inhale a potion of eucalyptus and other herbs put into boiling water, and had made an offering of flowers and some food to the shrine in the garden (a large Ganesha, washed and mollycoddled twice daily with Tender Loving Care), I managed to walk out to the street running alongside Five Rathas village, chasing the thrill of a silly corpse.
         On a table at the side of the road the dead man was lying, white and dry. He was opposite a tree, from whose low branches a snake was hanging by the neck. Villagers were filing past the body of the man, then passing by the tree in single file. Stopping briefly, they were each of them slapping the snake and shouting at it, throwing a torrent of Tamil abuse at the serpent. Then they were going on their way, having paid their respects to the corpse and having vented their anger on the murderer.
         The next day, feeling better, still a bit lopsided though, I caught a bus to Chingleput. Half an hour out of Mahaballipuram the monsoon reappeared; the shutters of the bus were lowered, but they were inadequate. Rain forced its way into the bus, and although I was sitting away from the window, warm water was pouring over me continually like some blind gardener with a watering can and its brass rose decided I should grow. Then it rushed along the floor of the bus, as if desperate at all costs to get to ground.


*     *     *


This story was first published in the magazine The Third Alternative, Summer 1994.

It is available as part of my short story collection The Bee and Other Stories, available as a Kindle download. 



Sunday 9 December 2012

Sunday 14 October 2012

New cover?



It is my grateful heart that makes me invent God anew every day. - The Immoralist.

How horrible it is to start in the semi-darkness before dawn! - “
I have seen the sky shiver as it waited for dawn. One by one the stars faded. - “

Watching For The Dawn

..is back on track! Have done what is probably a final edit on the 65k words written so far (already edited down so that's a good figure) and last evening started on new writing to complete the book.

Impressions: it flows well from We Go Down Slowly Rising, and they blend they admirably as part of a series.

The locations are a bit more diverse in this sequel than the first book: beginning in Uplands, Swansea, the action moves to Whitchurch in Cardiff and then to the bulk of the narrative, which happens in Newport and Caerleon.

I took a photograph yesterday by the Usk - close to where the cover photo for We Go Down... was taken -  and have mocked-up a cover for this new novel. I'll post it here.

A lot of quotes in this book too: as before, some Mao. And much of Andre Gide.


Thursday 11 October 2012

The Bee And Other Stories



Published 10.10.12, Kindle ebook

The Bee And Other Stories

And the last thing I'm publishing for a while (again, as a Kindle ebook), so I can get back down to work finishing Watching For The Dawn.

The Bee And Other Stories is a collection of 11 short stories written after my three extended visits to India, between 1986 and 1998.

One of the stories, A Night At Mrs Rajalaxmi's, was published in the Sci-fi magazine The Third Alternative (Summer, 1994), otherwise they are previously unpublished.

The locations span much of the subcontinent, including: Kashmir; Fatehpur Sikri; Goa; Kerala; Agra; Mahaballipuram and many other places.

The Bee And Other Stories is available for download now.




Tuesday 9 October 2012

Tangier, late 1980s










Under The Hill - Morocco

Under The Hill is set in Morocco, particularly in and around the city of Chefchaouen just inland from Tangier. 

Much of the atmosphere drawn on by me was from a brief - 48 hours - visit to Tangier in 1987 or 1988. 

I will post a few of the photos I took on that trip.

Under The Hill


Under The Hill, a short novel, now available as a Kindle ebook. 

New Old Novel!

An early, unpublished novel of mine, Under The Hill is now available as a Kindle ebook.

It's a short novel completed in the mid-1980s. I had just begun to send it off to publishers and agents when Paulo Coelho's novel The Alchemist was published to wide acclaim. I read it with incredulity: it was -totally coincidentally - very similar in subject matter, tone and style to Under The Hill.

I gave up sending my novel out and since then it's been collecting digital dust along with a considerable amount of other prose: fiction (novels, novellas, stories), plays (rejected by BBC Radio), travel articles, essays and criticism of Art.

There is another short novel completed in the late 1990s which I hope to make available soon also, in the same format.

Watching For The Dawn, the sequel to We Go Down... and promised for this summer, I have now put back until the winter. It remains tantalisingly close to completion though I experiencing something of a block in this effort.

Friday 28 September 2012

We Go Down Slowly Rising update

Still nothing to report on the sequel, though circumstance now favours a return to work on it!

I'm not far away from completing the main draft and I edit quickly and manically so as soon as the novel is written, it should be a matter of a couple of weeks before it's ready for publication.

It'll be worth it! After that, I'm not sure where I'll go next with fiction...

There's some old novels, novellas and stories that need to be looked at and possibly published. Actually, there's quite a bit of stuff around the place, all of it written alongside my poetry.

There's one short novel which was published in a Glasgow small press magazine, Magazing, over several issues.

There are a couple of novels (and plays) which are probably too heavily influenced by Samuel Beckett to be worth publishing, though I'm proud of them. They might see the light of day eventually but they're not a priority.

Or should I start thinking about a sequel to The Boy Who Zoomed?




New poetry book - 'Ashes'






Published yesterday: Ashes, a new volume of uncollected poetry. Some of the poems have been previously published in vaPublished today: Ashes, a new volume of uncollected poetry. Some of the poems have been previously published in various magazines, journals and anthologies.

Ashes features two poem sequences: 'Crow' and 'Dewlap'. The latter was written for R. S. Thomas, and the former is the earliest selection of work in this volume, dating back to the 1980s.

There are travel poems from India, Burma, Tunisia and elsewhere, and there are poems exploring the themes of Birth, Life and Death. One of the longer poems is an exploration of of what used to be called Manic Depression although there is also humour to be found in the book.


http://www.amazon.co.uk/Ashes-ebook/dp/B009HCXNPQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1348773777&sr=8-1

Sunday 24 June 2012

Thursday 5 April 2012

Like A River Flowing - A Story



                                                            "Wind batters me, waves hit me - I don't care."
                                                                        -- Mao Tse-Tung, 'Swimming'.



   It is a fact not commonly known that in 1966, just over a month after swimming for an hour in the Yangtse at Wuhan - for the purpose of ending rumours about alleged ill health - Chairman Mao Tse-Tung, the Great Helmsman of the Chinese Socialist Revolution, took a dip in the Bristol Channel.
   I was a young boy of six, visiting my mother's mother in Bath. We always took a steam train from Newport to the very edge of Wales, and when we got there, we transferred ourselves over to a boat, which sauntered smokily from Beachley to Aust, where we embarked upon another train. And thus did the slowness of time make itself apparent. Until eventually, just before it was time to return home, we arrived in Lower Weston for just long enough to rush through the house, wonder about the insouciant mothball smell in the air, sit on the rusting scooter in the back garden (wearing a crash helmet as big as an industrial wok), play George Best's Scored Another Goal beneath the wisteria, kiss nan and her fluttering husband goodbye, and race back to Wales.
   Once, we went over (more than a visit from one country to another, it was virtually a voyage across Hades) with my mother's father's wife (phew, our family is riddled with divorce). She happened to be drunk at the time, and dropped her handbag over the side of the boat into the murky water. Its small, lazy peaks were brain-grey, but the liquid beneath them was wine-dark, like the sweet sherry she favoured.
   I saw and heard it spring itself over, like a lame suicide. Her voice was high and hound-like when it went. Her glasses reflected what little sun there was, and for a moment I missed the fall of the thing, regaining my clear vision just in time to see the bag slip into the channel like a cormorant into the Yellow River after lithe carp.
   Her vowels were Brynglas through and through. As if being on top of a small hill made her mighty, she exclaimed the loss of her bag like she was Sir Walter Scott talking of Byron at the moment of his passing: "It is as if the sun has gone out." In fact, it was nothing of the sort: we all had a good laugh.
   Now when I look back to that moment (and it was over thirty years ago), I imagine that handbag, brown or black, crocodile or leather, plastic, riding slowly to the river bed, anchoring itself on an old wreck, and waiting. Waiting, until, 25 years later, young Richey falls from the bridge, bound in an angelic cocoon of loneliness, and sinks in almost that same spot. Drifts somewhat, sinks obliquely, and meets the handbag. They tangle, and he meets his maker with Maisie's handbag on his torn forearm, like a more magnificent Queen Mother. Bless him.
But all of this is a mere digression. The background to my story of the Great Helmsman and his traversing of the Bristol Channel (why do we not have our own name for this stretch of water, like the French have theirs for the English Channel? Perhaps 'The Portskewett Wash'?).
   On this particular visit, the train journey went as planned, and we all - mother, step-father, and I - alighted from the carriage into a plume of white steam enveloping the platform like fog on a Rangoon morning. Walked to the boat, and sat on the wooden bench which mimicked the curve of the vessel's white stern. Worn, smooth slatted timber, like driftwood from years of spray, salty or not. Giant lollipop sticks, from mammoth Fab or SkyRay lollies.
   (I still have my Wall's Captain's Moonfleet Log Book: in it, I discover that on the 7th December 1966 I was 3' 7" tall, and that for "Only 5/11d - and 2 Sky Ray wrappers" I could have been the proud owner of a SUPER MOON FLEET SPACE JACKET!) How stylish I'd have looked then, crossing that channel, positively millennial: so 21st Century.
   Back to the story in hand. The boat filled up with people, with cars, and slowly edged away from the jetty for the short hop over to England. These journeys must occasionally have been quite rough, sawing as they did at right-angles across the incoming or outgoing tide, which at this stretch of river has always been fast, and moody.
   We crossed, we disembarked, and amidst containers at the dockside, I was photographed running towards whoever held the camera and was watching my every step. There are cranes in the background, pale like the boat, and although it is a bright sunny day, my mother is behind me wearing a head scarf. How we got from there to Lower Weston I don't know, but we always did. Perhaps we even stopped the night there in Bath - this would certainly explain how the whole visit was manageable in a single day.
   It is the return trip, back to Newport, I remember so vividly on this occasion though. We'd arrived at Aust ready for the crossing, it was another breezy but quite fine day, and there were more people than usual milling about. Someone said there was a film being made at the small beach just upriver from where we then stood, and that as some of the filming was to be done on the Channel itself, the boat would be delayed for as long as possible: no more than an hour, as the tide determined our crossing. And as we know, it waits for no man. Or woman.
   Some people strolled up to see what was happening, and we went with them.
   The people being filmed were Chinese. This much I guessed from seeing their unusual clothing, and from the fact that several of them were holding up little flags. I'd used such flags myself at Barry Island for topping off sandcastles. A packet of paper and match-wood flags began my long history of travelling far and wide. It's why, when I stood in Tiannanmen Square once, I was thinking of my father plunging me into the dark water of Cold Knap, closely followed by a large football.
   So I knew what a Chinese flag looked like, even then.
   Little flashes of red splashed against the blue sky in a dance of primary colours, and I began to pick up the excitement whistling through the air. We went nearer, and were alongside these people. Altogether, there must have been almost a hundred people there, including these dozen or so Chinese men in their navy suits, and their plain flat caps with little stars on the front. I always associate Chinese people with sternness; as if they hold the weight of the world upon their shoulders. But that day, every one of them held a flag (some of them a bunch in each hand - like posies of flowers, red and gold), and had such beaming smiles on their faces that I thought they must be ill. Or had just been told a very funny joke.
   At the water's edge a smaller group of Chinese people I hadn't noticed before were paddling in the brown water, stepping quickly, as if acclimatising themselves to the coldness of it. Or as if avoiding tiny snapping turtles, like in the Ganges. They all wore identical blue swimming shorts, and I noticed that unlike my father (with whom I swam in the sea at Cold Knap every summer) their chests were completely hairless, like mine. Though it never occurred to me that they might just be very big children, I must have thought it.
   One man in particular caught my attention. He was in the middle of the group, and the others seemed to be deferring to him; protecting him from non-existent danger. Perhaps I imagined this, but some of the men did not look like they enjoyed a dip in the river.
   I let my hand slip out of my mother's, and I moved closer to the man for a better look. It was obvious then that he was the centre of attention here, and for some reason everyone had come to see him. A cine camera filmed his every breath, but I couldn't take my eyes off an enormous mole on his chin. I crept nearer, unsure if I was welcome there. I ran back to my mother and asked if I could paddle too. But before she could answer, I'd taken off my sandals and my socks, and was testing the water along with the group (I was wearing stripy shorts - reversible -, as usual).
   I edged nearer the man with the mole, and another man saw me, put a hand on my shoulder - not nastily, because he smiled at me; but firmly nonetheless. He spoke to me but I couldn't understand at first what he was saying because of his accent. I remember giggling, though I knew I shouldn't have, because he seemed to be speaking English out of his nose.
   This attracted the attention of the man with the mole, and he spoke to the man whose hand rooted me to the spot.
   He spoke more slowly to me then, more clearly, and I saw his lips move: The Chairman wishes to speak with you. I looked back at my mother, who had come alongside us, and she said that would be OK. So I walked the few yards to him, toes dipping into the water where it came ashore. Saw the man's stern face as I approached, until I was right in front of him, our toes next to each other in the muddy water, invisible, as though each of us had lost our feet and were balancing on ankles.
   He smiled at me and I forgot everything: it was such a strong, powerful smile, that words seemed to be formed just by its being there. He put a hand on my shoulder, and I realised how very different a hand could be: this was steadying, reassuring, almost spiritual, whereas the other man's hand was like a teacher's: restricting, unkind, but necessary.
   The Chairman was fat. His hair was swept back, dark, tinged grey, and that mole was almost out of view now that I was looking up. His chin jutted out, obscuring it, though when he talked he looked at me, and I tried not to stare. His forehead was very high, and I remember thinking how smooth it looked, almost like the timber slats of the ferry's benches.
   I asked him what he was doing, and he said - more clearly than the first man - that he was going for a swim.
   'In there?' I exclaimed, because I wouldn't have wanted to go in. He laughed, and I saw the cameraman film us together while he patted my shoulder, which by now felt about six inches lower than the other one.
   'Are you going to swim over there?', I asked him, pointing across the river to the other side. Then he laughed even louder.
   'Yes! Wei'ershì!
   And with that, he ruffled my hair and turned away, walking slowly into the Bristol Channel, followed by half a dozen other Chinese men, and watched by a crowd of others waving their little flags. All of it captured on film, as I suppose I had been. When the Chairman was in up to his knees, he looked around, and caught my eye. He laughed, made a shivering mime, and waved to me before turning away again. I realise now that he was very much like another man I have since seen: the Dalai Lama.
   And looking back, although one of them is now perceived to be happy, kindly, and beneficent, and the other something of a tyrant, they really don't seem essentially that different. Behind both their eyes, there was an unmistakable spark of power: an importance, perhaps this 'weight of the world' I spoke of earlier. And though the Dalai Lama has never put his hand on my shoulder, other people, other gods, have, and they were no different from Mao's.
   Just after this wave, my mother told me that we had to go back to the boat as it was due to leave, though how she would have known this is uncertain. I dragged my feet, which by now were back inside their socks, their brown sandals, eager to slow our return from the scruffy beach. Each time I looked back, I could see less of the swimmer. Until, when we reached the road again, all I could see was his head above the water, like a football drifting with the tide after George Best had booted it in.
   He stayed close to the shore, and didn't seem to even attempt crossing the channel and setting foot in Wales. Perhaps the currents were too strong.
   I saw his chin jutting up out of the water, and upon it, like a small beacon, that mole. I watched for a few moments more, before he - and the group of flag-wavers - were out of sight. I don't remember much else about that day. The benches were the same as the day before, the noise of the engine was as overwhelming as it had been on other occasions, and the cloud of smoke that emanated from the boat's funnel was as black as that of the train was white.
   I looked for him from the boat, but we were too far downstream. I like to think that after his swim, before he was whisked into his car and driven back to wherever it was he had come from that day, he looked over towards Welsh land, and for a moment at least became lost in thoughts of home: of mountains and their own, cleaner rivers. Columns of mountains supporting the sky.
   Shortly after my adventure, the Severn Bridge opened, and the ferry service stopped.
   And thinking of that day, those events, I often think that when my time comes, I'd like what's left of me to be scattered at that very spot, when the tide was sawing towards Wales. And I think of a line the swimmer wrote about an earlier swim:
   Dying - going into the past - is like a river flowing.

* * * * *

Historical note : On July 16th, 1966, Chairman Mao Tse-Tung swam for an hour in the Yangtse to deny rumours about his health. He was 73 years old, and was joined by 10000 other swimmers, whilst 200000 people watched him from the river bank. A couple of days later, the Cultural Revolution began.
*


Wednesday 4 April 2012

Watching For The Dawn

Well, now that The Boy Who Zoomed is finally out there, I can get back to work finishing the sequel to We Go Down Slowly Rising.

The second Ed Wall P.I. book will be Watching For The Dawn and moves our wandering detective out of Newport city centre somewhat. The novel begins in Swansea, moves to the eastern side of Cardiff and much of it then takes place in Caerleon.

I'm hoping to publish this sequel by the end of Summer. Might be earlier - depends on me getting down to work!

Kindle formatting issues

It has again proved very tricky - actually, impossible - to sort out the paragraph formatting for this ebook.

The MS Word document I uploaded was, on the screen, perfect. I edited it and polished it until there wasn't a single typo or error, but then when uploaded it was evident in the preview that some paragraph indents and body text had decided it wanted to follow other rules.

I went back into the MS Word doc and spent several hours well into the night tweaking the offending paragraphs and text, deleted the previous upload and uploaded the tweaked version...

Only to find that it was the same as before!

So I kept the upload as it was as it's out of my control how Kindle chooses to present the published version.

Apologies for the annoyingness of the book's format - readers will just have to concentrate on the words and pretend the book looks OK. Sorry.

Cwm yr Eglwys



Cwm yr Eglwys, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Ifan lives somewhere near that white house to the upper left.

(Photo from: http://www.abergwaun.com/places/cwm/cwm02650.jpg)

New novel published 4th April 2012

http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Boy-Who-Zoomed-ebook/dp/B007R6XUBG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1333558207&sr=8-1

Tuesday 3 April 2012

'The Boy Who Zoomed' - my new novel, for young teens (-ish)


"Jumping up and down to his favourite music one day, Ifan Catchpole, thirteen year old schoolboy and part-time librarian falls through his living room floor. Finding himself in a dusty basement, he discovers an intriguing machine that promises to send him on world-wide adventures.

Chasing, and sometimes chased, Ifan sets out to solve a mystery that takes him to Venice, Egypt’s pyramids, and back to his home turf of Pembrokeshire, Wales.

The Boy Who Zoomed is an adventure novel for the 21st Century, written for young teens and adults alike. And for those who suspect there might be more to life than television, video games and school."
'The Boy Who Zoomed', a novel for young teens (-ish) published as a Kindle ebook tomorrow!
 

Friday 16 March 2012

Review posted on amazon.co.uk by Steluc Brooks

A serial killer stalks the streets of Newport and the police are powerless as neatly arranged corpses pile up like the flotsam on the River Usk. At times like these a hero is needed. Ed Wall, Newport's answer to Philip Marlow, finds his time has come. Can he prevent the serial killer striking again? We Go Down Slowly Rising, is the first novel by Welsh writer John Gimblett and on this showing, it is hoped that it's not the last.

The author follows a well-worn path taken by many writers of detective fiction. The story is played out against a backdrop familiar to the author and therefore written about with confidence. The decaying post-industrial sprawl of Newport becomes as important a backdrop to this novel as the gothic-noire Edinburgh of John Rebus, the dreaming spires and cosy pubs of Morse's Oxford or the bleak Scandinavian scenery of Wallander's Ystadt and this is one of the novel's great strengths.

Although it's not the first time South Wales has been used as a location for a crime novel, most notably with John William's Cardiff Trilogy, it's certainly the most convincing piece of work in the Welsh-noire sub-genre so far. We are taken on a journey through a city infused with familiar scenery, so often clearly visible in any modern British city. Urban decay, bawdy nightlife, civic artwork, the secret enclaves of diverse ethnicity and a grudging sense of community will resonate with the reader. In fact, they are the touchstones that underpin our love/hate relationship with urban life, a point well illustrated throughout this novel via the watchful eyes of Ed Wall. When seen from this perspective, the author has pulled off a remarkable feat, composing a love letter to an unlovely, but not unlovable city striking a chord with those of us who see the urban landscape of the modern city as a thing of both joy and sadness.

My interest was sustained throughout with a wealth of arcane facts which had me frequently turning to the internet to widen my knowledge on matters that ranged from the ley lines that cross this country to Newport's Jewish cemetery with much more in between. Whilst the narrative concentrates on Wall's quest to solve the murders, the author's attention to frequently quirky detail gives the novel a sense of individuality missing in more `by-the-numbers' crime fiction.

Like all private detectives Wall's love life is troubled. His relationships with the opposite sex teeters between the potency of desire and his inability to act, reflecting the paradox faced by many men of a 'certain age'. Wall's flesh might be all too willing, but his spirit is certainly weak. Sometimes he just appears to be exhausted. However, `love conquers Wall' and in one of the book's most satisfying subplots, Wall and Monica, a Polish forensic scientist, fall for each other over shots of industrial strength vodka and the quest to unmask the killer before another death by wren's feather takes place As with all the best hard-boiled fiction, there is always a soft centre.

The author's portrayal of Wall's nemesis is convincing, introducing us to a full blown sociopath who quotes poetry as he stalks the mean streets of Newport with a pocket full of wren's feathers and murder in his mind. It was interesting to note how alike Wall and the killer were: two outsiders who distanced themselves from the life going on around them as they prowled the city at all hours of the day and night. At times, Wall seems to be chasing a shadow of himself and on more than one occasion, I had to re-read a passage to check whether these were the thoughts of Wall or the killer. We get to know a lot about the killer's likes and dislikes, his formative childhood experiences and even his name. Intriguingly, his name is revealed long before the conclusion of this novel, a brave step which does nothing to diminish the suspenseful climax of the book. In fact, such was the convincing portrayal of the killer that I was left wanting to know more. At no point did we find out what the killer's motives were and I was slightly disappointed that we were left without a clue as to what made this killer act. Perhaps the author wanted to leave this deliberately vague to allow the reader to speculate.

We Go Down Slowly rising is an enjoyable read and I would recommend it to anyone who likes their crime fiction populated with cynical private detectives, clueless police, sinister killers and the redeeming power of love. It's what your Kindle was invented for!

Sunday 19 February 2012

South Wales Argus interested in doing an article / interview on the novel! watch this space for news...

Saturday 4 February 2012


"A barn owl flew past, its white face cutting through the black shadow like a snowball, silent in flight."

'Jumbo House' restaurant, behind Art college


Closed down some years ago, unfortunately.

'Guardian'


Got to be worth using this location in a future Ed Wall P.I. novel. Sebastien Boyesen's huge sculpture is most impressive!

Thursday 2 February 2012

Stow Hill, between mosque and cathedral


The Wave


River Usk, opposite art college


St Woolos cathedral, opp. Severn Terrace


Severn Terrace, off Stow Hill


'The Church House', ex- 'The Six Bells'

Severn Terrace, off Stow Hill


Riverside pub


Mosque, Stow Hill (rear building)


Mosque, Stow Hill (front)


Art college


St Woolos cathedral steps


Art college - the copper roof


Wednesday 1 February 2012

Review from amazon.co.uk

"4.0 out of 5 stars Two New Stars, 31 Jan 2012
By 
This review is from: We Go Down Slowly Rising (Ed Wall P.I.) (Kindle Edition)
This is an entertaining and at times even educational murder/mystery/thriller. There are two main characters in the novel, and we get a small insight into each of the supporting cast. But the stars are undoubtedly Wall and Newport.

Newport, South Wales, seems an odd place to set a murder mystery but why not! Rather than a sprawling metropolis, Newport comes across as a dark, claustrophobic, and paradoxically cosy place. A place that was once growing and relevant but now just exists, as do its denizens. And yet, it still inspires people to invest in works of public art and, it would seem, has its own many-faceted sub-culture. Something about the place still engenders feelings of civic pride. People love Newport. Wall loves Newport. Through this insight, and almost cinematic portrayal of Newport the author has made the melancholy city another central character to the novel.
Newport comes across as a very real place and this realism bleeds into the rest of the plot.

Rather than create a stereotypical Marlowesque, brooding, "cool", heartless P.I., the main character is infused with his own philosophy, periodic but brief insurgences into comic relief in the form of banter with his colleagues and his "love interest". He seems almost symbiotic with the city and when his nightly perambulations are interrupted it seems he can't wait to get his next fix. The supporting characters are given just enough fleshing-out that you want to know more about them. As the mysterious mass murderer is slowly revealed I found myself imagining how he could have come to be where he is.
Occasionally Wall will go off on a meandering, wistful tack; steering the reader away from the plot (they almost reminded me of the way Dr. Dorian has his day-dreams in Scrubs) but these seemingly irrelevant diversions quickly pass and serve to help us know the character more intimately.

To be candid, I found some of the early chapters meandered a little and it read more like a tourist guide to Newport than a novel. But this is small criticism from someone that has started writing his own novels and never finished them. What the hell do I know!!! I don't think that people like me should criticise this. More importantly; before I knew it I was involved in the plot and I didn't look back until I'd finished the book in about five sittings.
Who would like this book? I don't know! But I know this: I do.

I will recommend this book to other people. And I'm sure they would do the same.
Looking forward to the sequel! "

Tuesday 31 January 2012

Very early taster of book 2


      Chapter 1

     Watching for the dawn. That’s what it’s all about, isn’t it? Survival. Just waiting for that old sun to come up 
again, even though there’s no certainty it’ll do so; something that’s happened billions of times before is no more 
fated to do so again because of it.
     Sitting in darkness, the black sky dotted with petals of punctuation, dawn and then daybreak gradually 
appeared. As the sun rose in the east, splaying its oak frayed rays towards the church Wall stood up and walked
under the upper branches of the yew tree towards the padlocked gate. Beside it was one of those two-part 
gateways that always infuriated him; enter the semi-circular iron pen, pull the hinged gate towards you and slip 
around the side of it, pushing it back to the side you’ve just come from.
    There’s got to be a proper name for it, this type of gateway, though Wall had his own choice: bastard.

Photos

Hoping to take some photos of the remaining locations this Thursday and will upload them soon after. The mosque, Severn Terrace, Stow Hill adjacent to the cathedral...

Random?

The locations of the serial murders in the novel were chosen randomly by me at first. It was only after I started looking at a map of Newport that I noticed the places I had chosen were related to each other, as described in the book.

And so the remaining murders - probably 3 or 4 - were chosen deliberately to fit this new pattern. But yes, to those who have asked me, 5 or 6 of the sites were plucked from the air (the air inside my brain, that is) without knowing they would line up.

When I began writing the novel, there was no grand plan; as usual with my writing, there is an element (if not a whole bag of them) of the words writing themselves. This might lead at some point to me drafting a rough outline plan of the story, but it's likely to be very loose and indeterminate.

Perhaps this comes from my interest, as a teenager, in Surrealism and 'automatic writing'?

So anyway, I wrote this novel as I went along, usually with little or no idea what would happen next. I like this method, and it suits me. I can pick up threads, change direction and include new research and interests as and when they arise. A bit like web surfing: one place leads you to another, which in turns leads...

Once I knew that the murders had been committed (?) according to 'ley lines' in the city, I knew exactly what I needed to do. What direction to take it in if I was ever in control of the flow of words, and I also knew from that what sort of character the killer was.

The ending was a complete surprise to me. Written almost manically over a week or so, listening to the same songs and pieces of music on repeat, this was certainly a case of me just being there to physically type the words as they flowed through my fingers to the keyboard.

I will post here later which music it actually was that drove me to the conclusion of the novel. But the Cocteau Twins were a large part of the engine.

Sunday 29 January 2012

But before No.2.....

...will come The Boy Who Zoomed. Also finished a while back and currently undergoing a final 'spit and polish', it's a full-length adventure novel for older children / young teens. It should be available to download within the next month and itself might turn out to be the first in a series featuring the same characters. However, nothing has yet been written for a follow-up. Watch this space...

No.2 in series

Watching For The Dawn, the 2nd. novel in the Ed Wall P.I. series, was all but finished some time ago. With just a few chapters left to write then some editing and a bit of 'spit and polish', it should be published by summer 2012.

Wren House, St. Fagan's


Hunting the Wren, St. Stephen's Day


Wren-boys, Ireland