8 Indie Books To Read This Summer

The very wise people at Kirkus wrote an article last month titled ‘8 Indie Books To Read This Summer’. One of them was mine and I didn’t even notice.

Here’s what they said:

“Set in a future Germany, Reality Testing by Grant Price teems with cyborgs and machine-enhanced humans. Identity theft takes on new meaning when a woman awakens to find herself transplanted into another body. This inventive world, where sexism, climate devastation, and capitalism have run amok, is “a bracing blast of neo-cyberpunk.”

Cyborgs is a bit of a stretch, but whatever. I’m a Donna Haraway fan.

The whole “ramping Reality Testing up for its print release by Black Rose” will be starting soon. Stay tuned for that. It’s going to be a real treat.

photo by alex knight.

photo by alex knight.

Chart / July

NO TIME TO CHAT I’M WRITING.

I mean, kind of. So many ideas, so many projects, but also so much sunshine and so many other commitments. I am also slightly apprehensive about the scale of flooding and firestorms around the planet. It’s funny how reality is already much scarier than the scorched earth I imagined in By the Feet of Men. All downhill from here.

42,000 words completed on the sequel to Reality Testing. End of August grandstand finish? Sure, why not.

Book of the month: I’m reading The Unbearable Lightness of Being, but it is ironically heavy going, so I will say that Breasts and Eggs by Mieko Kawakami is effervescent and breezy in the way that Japanese literature has while addressing weighty issues about the human condition. The cover is cool, too.

Sparking up nostalgia with the smell from a grill:

1 PJ Harvey - Sheela-na-gig

2 Neutro 9000 - Lady Burning Sky

3 Yves Tumor - Crushed Velvet

4 Tom Waits - Jockey Full of Bourbon

5 Jungle By Night - Hot Mama Hot

6 Kay Len Fecce - Wey Len Nobel

7 Lone, Morgane Diet - Hidden By Horizons

i recently watched the 1949 boxing movie ‘the set-up’ with robert ryan. boy those fight scenes left literally everything to be desired.

i recently watched the 1949 boxing movie ‘the set-up’ with robert ryan. boy those fight scenes left literally everything to be desired.

Chart / June

When sending out a query application or submitting a book for review, there’s sometimes a box that will ask something like: “What is your favourite line from the novel?”

I find that question virtually impossible to answer. First of all, to remember even a handful of lines verbatim out of 90,000+ words that I wrote two years before is something I fail at miserably. Second, I wonder what favourite could mean in this context. Is it a beautiful piece of description, a stirring piece of dialogue, a collection of meat-and-veg words thrown together in a pot and inexplicably, serendipitously turned into Michelin-star cuisine? Does it even matter?

My experience of life at the moment is a little like seeking an answer to that question. What’s my favourite activity? What do I enjoy doing? Where do I like to eat and drink? What still stands out in my mind after fifteen months of fuck-all?

Again: does it even matter? No, probably not. Being out and about is enough. I don’t need favourites right now, because even something as simple as taking a seat at a café table or in a cinema has a quiet, earned satisfaction to it. Like reading back through a piece of writing that has been gathering digital dust in the corner of a C drive and finding passages that prompt a smile or an intake of breath, now is a period in which to recall and explore the old rhythms, to remember, to engage with that which has been put aside for nearly a year and a half. Some things will no longer be as palatable or as enticing as they once were, while others will be more of a technicolour experience than ever. All that matters, I think, is to do as much possible in this time and to cement new favourites in the process.

Then, once autumn/winter come around again, I can retreat into my shell and send off more query applications asking me inane questions.

NEWS OF THE MONTH: none? I’m writing a sequel to Reality Testing. That’s about it. I’m barely sending out short stories, Reality Testing itself is still in production with Black Rose Publishing, and I have no events coming up, reviews scheduled or guest articles to write. Quite the novelty, I gotta say. And not unwelcome.

BOOK OF THE MONTH: The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. Aside from Le Carré describing his protagonist as “a man in his 50s, well-built, with a swimmer’s body, and sexy, real manly, like the woman can’t not go for him yo”, the writing and the Cold War Berlin atmosphere are strong. It’s so far removed from The Night Manager that I’m glad I gave John another chance.

MUSIC OF THE MONTH:

  1. Rochelle Jordan - Love You Good

  2. India Shawn - Not Too Deep

  3. Jimi Jules - Don’t Take It Personal

  4. Joseph Ray - Giulin

  5. Sorry - Cigarette Packet

  6. Logic1000 - I Won’t Forget

  7. Biicla - Girl

photo of a v. strange bouldering wall by david pisnoy

photo of a v. strange bouldering wall by david pisnoy

Chart / May

For the first time in the modest history of this calling card I like to call ‘website’, I missed a monthly chart. Not that it matters, but the reason was as follows: when it was announced that pubs would open in the UK on 17 April, I booked a ticket and flew back to the good Albion of my birth. Since then I’ve been running around supping from the well of social conviviality like a horse that has staggered out of the desert and into town. There is nothing ground-breaking about this sentiment, but the simple ability to sit at a trestle table with a friend and order a four-litre pitcher of beer and drink that beer and order another and then stagger home and dance to Talking Heads is something to cherish. I ain’t gonna be taking things for granted any time soon.

In news: not much. A lovely review for Reality Testing by Jason at This Dad Reads. A short story previously published in The Sea Letter’s anthology and now posted on its website. And finally (a little while back), an essay I wrote about cyberpunk for the polychromatic publication The Abstract Elephant.

Book of the month: All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy. Predictable that I would love this? Yes. Pleasing anyway? Yes.

Music is Queen:

  1. A Prayer For England - Massive Attack

  2. The Glorious Land - PJ Harvey

  3. The Daily Mail - Radiohead

  4. Reigns - IDLES

  5. Shortcummings - Sleaford Mods

  6. London Loves - Blur

  7. Inglan is a Bitch - Linton Kwesi Johnson

impressionizm.

impressionizm.