Chapelle Saint Michel, Ile de Brehat
The new novel by John Gimblett "We Go Down Slowly Rising" is available as a Kindle ebook from amazon.co.uk. This blog will give some background to the novel and any others in the series as they become available.
Saturday, 7 April 2012
Ile de Brehat, Brittany
Some of The Boy Who Zoomed takes place at the church on Brehat island, Brittany.
(Photo by John Gimblett, 2006)
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!
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.
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."