Showing posts with label E-books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label E-books. Show all posts

Monday, 25 June 2012

The Vanity Game – Image is everything




Today’s guest blog is by novelist and screenwriter HJHampson whose e-book The Vanity Game is a "terrific black comedy" set against the world of English football and celebrity. Originally from Runcorn she now lives in London.  Her novel has garnered such high profile  fans and praise from authors such as Val McDermid and Megan Abbott.

Blasted Heath recently published my debut novel, The Vanity Game, as an e-book.

The Vanity Game is a noirish satire about a footballer called Beaumont Alexander whose A-list lifestyle spirals out of control after he does something stupid at a celebrity party. 

One of the themes that the novel explores is identity and image. At the start of the novel I use a quote from French Situationist Guy Debord, who wrote a book called The Society of the Spectacle. Whilst I would like to stress that the novel is much lighter in tone than this rather heavy-going slab of leftist philosophy, I do feel that in its own special way, The Vanity Game is a little bit situationist.

For those unfamiliar with Debord’s concept, he basically reckoned that in modern capitalist societies relations between commodities and images have replaced actual relations between people. It’s more than image-worship: the spectacle itself is the way relations between people have become mediated by images.  John Harris, writing in the Guardian, explains it better than I can.

I read the Society of the Spectacle when I was an angry, leftist philosophy student in the late 1990s and not long after that there was an explosion in ‘celebrity culture’. I remember getting a pilot edition of Heat free with Select magazine (long may it rest in peace), and thinking ‘well, this will never catch on’, but somehow it did, and it seemed to me that this was exactly what Debord was talking about.  I should have kept that pilot edition, it might be worth something now.

Anyway The Vanity Game satirises this celebrity culture which has burgeoned to an alarming degree in the last two decades and I guess what prompted me to write the novel was, in part, some sympathy with Debord’s ideas.  What came before all those magazines that scream stories of TV stars cellulite horrors from the supermarket checkout stands? I can’t even remember… oh yes, I suppose it was magazines like Select, or Melody Maker or Smash Hits.

Mass media, Debord says, is the most obvious manifestation of the spectacle, and look at how celebrity magazines and women’s magazines construct a fake reality:  the love affairs of the ‘famous’ are sensationalised – made out to be whimsical or agonizing in equal measure, everyone is breaking up and making up all the time; how many of these stories about Ms. So-and-so going through strife with Mr. So-and-so are actually true? Truth doesn’t matter.   The diets of the famous are impossible, the clothes on the fashion pages are too expensive for most readers to really be able to afford … and let’s not even get onto airbrushing!  It’s all just a representation of a lifestyle that doesn’t exist. 

All in all, I think it’s extremely sinister, and I guess it was the sinister aspect that inspired me to write about it.  If the images in the magazines are not real, who are the real people behind those fake images, and what are they getting away with?  These are the questions I hope The Vanity Game answers.

Debord suggested a fun way to battle the forceful surge of the spectacle: détournement – which sort of entails playing the spectacle at its own game and creating a (usually humorous) fake reality of the fake reality, so I hope he would have appreciated my novel if he were still with us.  He died from a (self-inflicted) stab wound to the stomach in 1994, and astute readers will note there is a little nod to this in The Vanity Game too.  




Friday, 3 June 2011

Deadly Focus

Deadly Focus by RC Bridgestock, is the new novel from husband and wife writing team Bob and Carol Bridgestock. Writing under the name R C Bridgestock the couple have almost 50 years experience working at the front line of policing.

Bob Bridgestock brings 30 years of service in the West Yorkshire police force where he rose to the position of Detective Superintendent. Having worked on and helped solve many high profile murder cases, Bob brings a level of authenticity to Deadly Focus often lacking in police procedural novels. Carol worked for 17 years in the police force being a member of the Civilian Support Staff, seeing life in the force in a supporting role and experiencing the life of a partner who husband was dealing with scores of high profile cases.


Deadly Focus is the first in a series of novels to be published by Caffeine Nights featuring D.I. Jack Dylan and is set in the fictional town of Harrowfield, Yorkshire. “Even though I worked on a large number of violent crime and murder cases I never wanted to write a non-fiction book, but I draw on those experiences and my extensive knowledge of how real life investigations proceed.” Bob Bridgestock said.

“I write the plot and the story line, taking the reader with me from the moment the Detective gets the call to a body. So from first-hand experience readers can travel to the dark corners, feel frightened and threatened, as well as laughing.” says Bob. “Jack Dylan is an ordinary man doing a tough job which leads him to deal with some of the darkest things faced by humanity.”

Carol works on the draft, building up the story line and characters whilst also bringing out the underlying emotion of the tough side of being a detective. She also adds a perspective which is often over-looked in drama and fiction and that is of the supportive partner. “Often the lead detective is portrayed as being a loner or returning home to nothing more than a whiskey bottle. There are thousands of partners out there who support their husbands and wives, who every day put themselves in harm’s way to keep this country safer. Dylan comes home to a supportive partner in the shape of Jen, and she becomes the rock to keep him anchored.”

Deadly Focus opens with a young girl being snatched from the streets of Harrowfield as she returns from her grandmother’s house a few doors down the road. As realisation dawns on the parents of the child, a body is found and a second child goes missing. D. I Jack Dylan knows that the cases may be connected and realises that a child serial killer may be stalking the streets of Harrowfield. As the case progresses an unexpected twist takes the case close to home and Dylan’s home life begins to suffer.

Deadly Focus is published in paperback and all eBook formats on 31st May 2011.

Paperback ISBN: 978-1-907565-08-3

eBook ISBN: 987-1-907565-09-0

About Caffeine Nights
Deadly Focus is published by Caffeine Nights Publishing in both paperback and eBook versions. Caffeine Nights has adopted an environmental stand against the unsustainable felling and use of trees in publishing. Caffeine Nights CEO, Darren Laws said. “Publishing is a dirty business but there are ways to make it more sustainable and adopt practices to make publishing greener and more efficient. The paper stock our printers use is guaranteed Sustainable Forestry Initiative® (SFI®) certified and Forest Stewardship Council™ - (FSC®) certified. We work on a basis of print on demand only supplying books to order to save over-supply to bookstores and almost eliminate returns, saving the pulping and landfill of returned stock.”

www.caffeine-nights.com
01634 837049
info@caffeinenights.com

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Newsy Stuff

Excellent article in today’s (3 November) Guardian about Hard Case Crime and whether or not they can solve the mystery of digital publishing. Whilst I am not going to get into a discussion about this I can only say that they publish some bloody good books! I am really pleased that they did not hit the dust when Dorchester decided to pull the plug on publishing paperbacks and that they have found themselves new a new publisher here in the UK. At least now it will be easier for me to get my hands on the books. The covers are divine and the stories even better. If you have not read any of them, where have you been?


According to Galleycat Janet Evanovich is looking for some co-authors. The full article can be found here including how to submit!

Brad Pitt is according to the Hollywood Reporter to team up once again with director Andrew Dominik in the film version of George V Higgins comic crime comedy Cogan’s Trade. Dominik directed Pitt in the film The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. Pitt will also produce.

According to the Bookseller the Ian Fleming Estate are to sell the James Bond e-books directly themselves bypassing Penguin. The books are to be published by Ian Fleming Publications. The full article can be found in the Bookseller. Could this be opening a can of worms?