Sundown

COVER REVEAL: Pacific State

Okay, here we go. The second novel in the Sundown Cycle is called PACIFIC STATE and it will be released by Black Rose Writing on 21 December 2023.

What’s the rumpus? Just this:

On the streets of Berlin all morals can be bought for a price, and Owen Resler sold his long ago. Once an underground dissenter, now a corporate drone, he spends his days reluctantly manipulating data for Big Pharma. Across town, notorious gun-for-hire Mia Warsaw is putting together a team to assassinate one of the city's more unscrupulous business moguls—and she needs someone to handle the ones and zeroes. When Warsaw crosses paths with an increasingly desperate Resler, she hands the former radical an ultimatum: he can either succumb to death by a thousand bureaucratic paper cuts or take a chance with her. Of course, there's no guarantee he'll survive that, either…

Below is the cover, hot off the 90s graphic novel press. The Ryan Gosling tech bro looks slightly worried, but I assume he simply forgot to take his creatine that morning after his MR-assisted workout.

PACIFIC STATE is a sequel to Reality Testing only in the sense that it takes place in the same universe. It is a standalone story. It will be available for pre-order soon enough.

NEW NOVEL ALERT

“You must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you.” - Ray Bradbury

I’m pleased to announce that Texas-based publishing house Black Rose has agreed to publish the second novel in the SUNDOWN cycle. The date of publication has been set as 21 December 2023. A standalone story set in the near-future, climate-ravaged Sundown universe, this new novel follows Reality Testing, which was selected as one of Kirkus’s Top 100 Novels of 2021 and received praise from the likes of the San Francisco Review and 23rd Legion as well as writers Neil Sharpson, William J. Donahue and Kiran Bhat.

I will reveal the title of the novel and the cover in due course.

yeah, this isn’t the cover. I wish it was. maybe a little too blade runner though.

Chart / August

Did I realise that I didn’t write a chart post for July? Nope. Is that because I’m frantically working through the sequel to Reality Testing? Yes, indeed it is. Good guess.

It’s a funny time, revising a novel. Everything else goes out the window. The short story/essay mill grinds to a halt. The promotion for other books dries up. The vague idea of writing something for the website that isn’t a chart evaporates. The writing day becomes a battle of desire vs exhaustion, i.e. getting a passable draft down before becoming so sick of the novel’s world and the characters who populate it that I go off the boil well before the end, leading me to write such timeless sentences as “He looked through his eyes at the man who was looking at him” or “She had been trained to do it and it alone, like a train that is on rails and can’t go anywhere else because it is a train”. That kind of gold. One third still to go, and then I’ll start crafting something beautifully elegiac to submit to The Paris Review come wintertime.

News: Oh, I’m also working on a sci fi TV project. But it’s confidential so that’s all I can say. Sounds grand, doesn’t it? It most certainly is.

Film of the month: Forbidden Planet. We had a comic store called Forbidden Planet in Plymouth. Of the five or so years I spent there total, going into FP was the coolest thing to do with my time on a Saturday. Robocop dolls, Judge Dredd collections, mogwai-sized mogwai, the smell of weed and dust in the air. The eponymous film naturally has none of that, though there would likely be no Murphy without Robby the Robot. And who needs weed when you have Leslie Nielson playing a straight man? I came away from this 1956 extraplanetary extravaganza with one question on my mind: Who would win in a fight between the girder-carrying, bench-pressing Robby and the psychopathic, glamtastic Box from Logan’s Run? Both could take ED-209 in an instant, I reckon.

Book of the month: I have been reading the same book for the past six weeks and that book is American Gods by everyone’s favourite Gaiman. I like it and also I do not like it. The story is serpentine, but doesn’t seem to make much sense, and the writing veers from smart to clunky as hell within the space of a paragraph. By accident, I bought Gaiman’s “preferred” version, which contains 12,000 extra words his editor wisely cut out. That puts the word count at around 200,000, which seems excessive for “the adventures of a guy named Shadow and all the driving he did that time through snowy Americana”. I would really like to get it finished, because I have a bunch of other books waiting, but - like Shadow’s coin tricks - it never seems to end.

Album of the month: In a nice coincidence, it is a dead heat between punky upstarts The Chats with their sophomore effort GET FUCKED and post-hardcore heroes Chat Pile, who conjure up a series of nihilistic mechanical soundscapes in GOD’S COUNTRY. A very chatty month.

Music to mark a catastrophic rise in sea levels:

  1. Stimming, Robag Wruhme - Alpe Luisa

  2. Orbital - Smiley

  3. Jockstrap - 50/50

  4. Hudson Mohawke - Tincture

  5. Huerco S. - Plonk VI

  6. t l k - Most Alive

  7. boci - Time Weaver

The Castheiser Illusion

Special post alert: Yesterday I had a short story titled THE CASTHEISER ILLUSION published in Green House Literary. I’m drawing attention to it because: 1. It’s very good, 2. It’s about people wilfully ignoring the climate crisis, 3. Europe is burning.

Set in near-future London, Stacks is an out-of-work astrophysicist struggling to find a reason to keep going when the outlook for humanity is so bleak. Then a chance encounter with an old colleague sends him down a rabbit hole of guilt, manipulation and mitigation. Soon only one question matters to Stacks: What - or who - is Castheiser?

THE STORY IS AVAILABLE HERE.

‘The prediction models think the next storm will wipe out half of London.’

‘Didn’t the last one do that already?’ Melchior laughed when he saw the look on Stacks’s face. ‘Oh, it’s no joking matter, I know. All those dead. But what else can one do? Better to see the humour in the situation than to fret.’

The Castheiser Illusion is the third story in an extended series set in the Sundown universe. The other two are Pawn’s Promotion and Combers. More to come.