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Everything: A Book About Manic Street Preachers by Simon Price (1999)

I can’t listen to music too often. It affects your nerves, makes you want to say stupid, naïve things and stroke the heads of people who could create such beauty while living in this vile hell. And now you mustn’t stroke anyone’s head, you might get your hand bitten off.
– V.I. Lenin

Everything: A Book About Manic Street Preachers by Simon Price (1999)Terrified of saying the “stupid, naïve things” that Vlad mentions above, I’m going to be quiet about my relationship with the music (and associated culture) of the Manic Street Preachers. How could I possibly sum up the amount of influence they’ve exerted on me over the past twelve years? Yes, I was a reader before I listened to their music, but the Manics made me realize that literature could be dangerous, exciting and even sexy. This is a band whose mainstream breakout hit began “libraries gave us power.” For me, the Manics promoted literacy over rock and roll excess, and it doesn’t feel over the top to announce that I came to literature through their music/culture. Sorry Vladimir, I just can’t help it. Anyway, this isn’t meant to be autobiography, but in reviewing Simon Price’s biography of the band Everything: A Book About Manic Street Preachers, one can’t help but be a little bit confessional. Really, that personal introduction was just a warning that what follows is intensely coloured by my own connection to the music, the band and how they changed me.

It’s rare to see music biography reviewed on book blogs. I think that these books are usually seen as puff PR pieces, cut and pasted from the media releases and not given to criticism or careful analysis. Everything doesn’t fall into this category, it’d be impossible to get away with doing so given how keenly literate the band itself and Manic Street Preachers fans tend to be. That’s a generalization of course, but a band that references Valerie Solanas, Primo Levi and Octave Mirbeau among others isn’t going to be given the same treatment as other music biography publisher friendly unit shifters.

[on Motown Junk] This was rock ‘n’ roll patricide (the Manics had once described themselves as ‘four baby Hamlets’): the clearest expression of their impulse to destroy history, both musically and culturally. As they told the NME: ‘By denying ourselves a past we are trying to find a worthwhile present out of this junky wreckage of life.’

The band’s history is anything but straight forward – outrageous statements, messes of eyeliner and spraypaint, the darkest (and best) contemporary rock album ever (The Holy Bible), the tragic disappearance of key member Richey Edwards, the comeback album, and the comfortable segue into the league of rock and roll royalty. It’s a history fraught with tension, depression and contradiction. No matter how familiar you are with the trajectory of the band, hardcore Manics fan and music journalist Simon Price brings his enthusiasm and first hand insight to make it interesting. Even the sections discussing the music itself don’t resort to the clichéd language of rock journalism. Price carefully portrays the energy of the music, as well as analysing the meaning without coming across as ostentatious. Thankfully, he’s also not afraid to call out the truly awkward moments on their albums as overblown, dated, or impenetrable. However it is a criticism that is clearly couched in love.

Price’s criticism isn’t limited to the music. Interspersed throughout the traditional band history are essays on various topics: one for each member of the band – the politics and contradictions of their public persona, the devotion of the fans, how they interacted with all levels of popular culture, ruminating on the lack of success in America, the implications of the bands Welshness and the casual racism of the music press, sex and gender as embodied by Richey Edwards, self-harm and mental illness and the band’s continuation after the disappearance of Edwards. It is these essays which help raise Everything above the bog-standard music biography format, instead offering a new way of looking at and thinking about the Manic Street Preachers and their music.

[Also, this book possibly has magic powers as while I was reading it the Manics announced their first Australian tour since January 1999. To say I am excited is understating it just a little.]

Transmetropolitan: Volume Three, Year of the Bastard by Warren Ellis and Darick Robertson (1999)

Transmetropolitan: Volume Three, Year of the Bastard by Warren Ellis and Darick Robertson (1999)This review is going to be a difficult one to write. Every time I open Transmetropolitan: Volume Three Year of the Bastard I end up reading the damn thing all the way through again. I’m up to about four times now. Probably five by the time I manage to knock out this review. I take back everything I said previously about loving Transmetropolitan. That was just a schoolgirl crush, puppy love if you will. Year of the Bastard marks the true beginning of a full blown, intense, shout it from the rooftops love.

Volume Three, Year of the Bastard is the beginning of a major story arc in Transmetropolitan. Spider Jerusalem, professional muckraking journalist of the future, hits the campaign trail of the upcoming presidential election, doing all that he can to uncover the political corruption and deceit on all sides. The Beast, Spider’s political enemy, a larger than life all-American leader, is being taken on by hopeful upcomer Gary Callahan – nicknamed The Smiler for his constant and unfailing grin. Spider’s unbiased political position – he wants the best for the people, but doesn’t think that politicians will be able to offer real help – means he is free to report on the best and the worst of both sides. His ruthless honesty, his refusal to be bought, is admirable despite the toll it takes on his health and sanity.

I write a column for The Word newspaper called “I Hate It Here.” The joy of being in this City has worn off. I sense, vaguely, that I’m finally as beaten as everybody else. I sense everything vaguely, these days.

I’m not going to reveal too much of the narrative because the major pivotal point, a politically motivated assassination, has such a strong impact. It proves all of Spider’s cynical assumptions correct and betrays what little hope and faith he had in the campaign. A single page of the look of utter shock on Spider’s face, the background for once in the series just white space – none of the City’s technology or advertising crammed into the space – is just horrifying in it’s ability to convey so much emotion. This is something that I really like about Robertson’s art, the facial expressions are phenomenal. Much of the drama comes from human interaction and reaction, and the artwork is such an integral factor of the series’ appeal.

Royce:  “One day a little over six years ago I went to Spider Jerusalem’s house, Yelena. We were missing a column, and I’d had enough. I had a gun. I was going to walk away with either a column or his heart. I found him in his house’s bath, his body covered in regenerative tape set to reinflate and re-wall his veins, shooting heroin into the skin between his toes. He was bleeding from the eyes because he’d rubbed cocaine into his tearducts thinking it’d keep him awake. Banging H into his feet because all his other veins had collapsed. His last book was being released, he was writing hugely popular columns. He was beloved for torturing the president in print weekly, he was all over TV and the feeds and whispered adoringly over at dinner parties. And then it all stopped. He was loved and rich, and suddenly he couldn’t write anymore. Not like he was, anyway. Spider Jerusalem needs to be in the City to write, Yelena. But he also needs to be hated.”

In amongst all the political scandal, Spider gets a new assistant, Yelena Rossini, and his previous assistant Channon returns as his bodyguard after a brief stint as a Bride of Christ in Fred Christ’s church. Spider has to deal with his public persona being sold as a commodity and the responsibility of being seen as the voice of the people, and does so by ingesting ridiculous amounts of legal and illegal drugs. A single story issue finishes off this volume, while still bitter and misanthropic, adds a little trademark black humour to what is otherwise an emotionally draining collection. Spider, alone in the City at Christmas time, expresses his hatred for the holiday season as well as revealing several distasteful new rituals that have taken hold.

Transmetropolitan just keeps getting better, even when I already thought it was amazing, sucking me into its horrid vision of our future and the search for Truth within it. Now to read Year of the Bastard a fifth time.

Transmetropolitan: Volume Two, Lust for Life by Warren Ellis and Darick Robertson (1999)

Transmetropolitan: Volume Two, Lust for Life by Warren Ellis and Darick Robertson (1999)Every review of Transmetropolitan on Start Narrative Here is going to be a 700 word love letter to the series and antihero Spider Jerusalem. Well, would you continue reading 11 volumes of a series you felt only mildly about? It’s quite bewildering to think that I’ve only just finished Transmetropolitan: Volume Two Lust for Life and already the characters, the world and the issues portrayed seem so vivid and that I’ve formed such a deep attachment to Spider Jerusalem, despite all his faults. Warren Ellis and Darick Robertson’s vision of the future is one that is quite easy to get lost in. If I were so inclined, I think this would be the type of series I’d write fan-fiction about.

Even within the introductory pages, with an example of Spider’s column “I Hate it Here” in place of the usual introductory essay, Ellis manages to show Spider’s complicated relationship with his reading public. He fights for truth, against the sickness and hate that drove him away from the City in the first place, and yet seems almost powerless to stop it. And he fights for the people that read his column, at the same time despising them for believing and perpetuating the lies and not taking action: “If you loved me, you’d all kill yourselves today.”

Volume Two: Lust for Life opens with another three short stand alone issues that elaborate on the technological advancements of the future society of the City, and the problems these cause for humanity. In “Boyfriend is a Virus” Channon, Spider’s assistant, has been dumped by her boyfriend Ziang who plans to “download” himself. Urging her to use journalism to work through her grief, Spider takes her through the downloading process – a concept that explores a post-biological body and pushing the limits of the idea of what is human. Ultimately though, even in a different bodily form, betrayal is still betrayal. For all the technological advancements and new possibilities, the same base emotions and instincts still dominate.

The other two stand alone issues “Another Cold Morning” and “Wild in the Country” show how the City has willfully neglected the past. People from the twentieth century who chose to be cryogenically frozen and re-birthed into a new century are shunned by contemporary society: they are the shell shocked veterans of a time that is ignored by the present. Spider takes the time to visit the Reservations, closed off communities that were built to preserve the cultures of the past. Their purpose is to preserve and educate, but how effective are they when people are too busy to visit them? All these detailed short stories work together to create the larger vision of the City, and adds to our understanding of the psyche of the people.

Spider: You want to go out to dinner sometime?
Hannah: Sorry, no. I’m married, not hungry, infected with seven unknown diseases, gay, pregnant with lizards and clinically dead.

Yet, after those three short issues I was a bit concerned that the development of Spider’s character was going to be overshadowed by these short and sharp pieces of world-building storytelling. Then the second half of Transmetropolitan: Volume Two is a story arc – “Freeze Me With Your Kiss” – that gives us insight into Spider’s previous persona and professional life as he battles against a beyond the grave threat from his vicious ex-wife. Spider has accumulated a glut of enemies – those who he knows are after him, like the suited up vigilantes who storm his apartment intending to kill him or the headless assassination agent, and those he is blissfully unaware of, like a one-eyed police dog intent on retribution for an unwanted neutering. Sometimes the structure in these issues felt a bit stilted, told in shifting perspective mini-strips but nonetheless the storyline is involving. Spider not only comes off as the badass, threat evading journalist that he is but we slowly become more aware of his vulnerabilities.

This story arc also builds his relationship with other characters, as Royce, Spider’s editor, become more wary of Spider’s journalistic approach. It seems that Spider’s scruples and dedication to the Truth may fall by the wayside in his ruthless pursuit of the story. But, we’ve known from the start that Spider is a less than perfect individual, and I think that’s half of his appeal. And with another nine (!) volumes to make it through, I’m really looking forward to seeing where Warren Ellis takes the series and the characters.

Previous Transmetropolitan review: Transmetropolitan: Volume One, Back on the Street.

Illumination & Night Glare: The Unfinished Autobiography of Carson McCullers (1999)

Written in the months of 1967 leading up to her death, Illumination & Night Glare (edited by Carlos L. Dews and published in 1999) was Carson McCullers’ final attempt to shape the mythology of her own persona, to create the legacy of herself she wished to leave to the world and to record her own perception of herself. Rather than taking the structure of a typical biographical account, McCullers’ narrative of her own life is fluid, shifting between the stages of her life in a sweetly sentimental ramble. Perhaps it is the unfinished nature of the manuscript, but Illumination & Night Glare feels like sitting in the same room as Carson McCullers and listening to her tell all the interesting little tales that make up her life story.

The illuminations of the title are the flashes and bursts of inspiration and creativity that defined her direction with her work when she least expected it. The inspirations were strange and unpredictable to her, but she appreciated it them coming as they did after months of struggle. The night glares are the periods of debilitating illness and harrowing setbacks and life circumstances. She never bemoans the fact of her illnesses, in fact she points to other creative individuals who also overcame physical impediment to achieve great works, taking instead great pride in the ability to overcome.

My life has been almost completely filled with work and love, thank goodness. Work has not always been easy, nor has love, may I add.

McCullers is surprisingly open about the disappointing sexual dimension of her relationship with Reeves, yet rather coyly ambiguous when it comes to her other affections, especially Annemarie Clarac-Schwarzenbach, although it appears their relationship was just as fraught. As she approaches her remarriage to Reeves, she becomes shyly reticent, claiming often that she didn’t know why she went back to him, a sentiment which is betrayed by her tender letters to him during the war. Carson’s portrayal of Reeves is much kinder than any to be found in other biographical accounts, or from comments from people who were close to the pair. She creates a more sympathetic image of a deeply troubled man.

It was a shock, the shock of pure beauty, when I first saw him; he was the best looking man I had ever seen. he also talked of Marx and Engels, and I knew he was a liberal, which was important, to my mind, in a backward Southern community. Edwin, Reeves and I spent whole days together, and one night when Reeves and I were walking alone, looking up at the stars, I did not realize how time had passed, and when Reeves brought me home, my parents were distressed, as it was two o’clock in the morning. However, my mother was also charmed by Reeves, and he would bring her beautiful records. [...] I was eighteen years old, and this was my first love.

The manuscript ends on a wistful recollection of happier times, and the important, if complex, position Reeves held in her emotional life.

“But you must [have] had happy times,” she said.
“Yes,” I said, “I remember one night we climbed up on the mansard roof of our house just to see the moon. We had good times, and that’s what made it so difficult. If he had been all bad, it would have been such a relief because I would have been able to leave him without so much struggle. And don’t forget, he was of enormous value to me at the time I wrote [The Heart is a Lonely Hunter] and [Reflections in a Golden Eye.] I was completely absorbed in my work, and if the food burned up he never chided me. More important, he read and criticized each chapter as it was being done. Once I asked him if he thought [Heart] was any good. He reflected for a long time, and then he said, ‘No, it’s not good, it’s great.’”

While providing an honest account of Reeves McCullers, it also shows Carson as she wanted to be seen – not the victim of a number of physical ailments or damaged relationships, but first and foremost as a writer. From her nurtured childhood – revealing that the moment her mother thought she was a genius, young Lula Carson sat at the piano and played a song she’d heard only hours before, was actually premeditated and practiced beforehand – to her stunted musical career, success in her early twenties, her complex relationships and friendships, and the disappointments of her later works. She writes enthusiastically of her own literary inspirations – Katherine Mansfield, Thomas Wolfe, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy and E.M. Forster. The lively days of 7 Middagh Street – the house in which she lived with W.H. Auden, Gypsy Rose Lee, George Davis and Richard Wright among others – seems an idyllic creative atmosphere, although it resulted more in partying than being conducive to a positive writing environment.

Buffered by the truly touching and often desperate letters between Reeves and Carson during the time between their marriages while Reeves was serving his country in World War Two, and McCullers’ original outline for The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, Illumination & Night Glare is a amicable recollection of a tumultuous life told with the requisite hope and understanding one has come to expect from McCullers.

Short Story Soiree: Third Party by Jay McInerney (1999)

How It Ended: New and Collected Stories by Jay McInerney (2009)I’m not as far into Jay McInerney’s short story collection How It Ended: New and Collected Stories as I would usually be by this time of the week. However, I think that taking it slow with McInerney is ideal because, at least eight stories into it, many of the stories cover very similar territory. The stories are short, sharp observations of the rich, usually involving copious amounts of substance abuse. From what I know of Bright Lights, Big City, this plutography seems to be his stock in trade. Fittingly enough, Jay McInerney made a cameo appearance in the second series of Gossip Girl. This week’s Soiree is going to be spending a little time with “Third Party”, a story set in one night in Paris.

Paris, the city of lights, the city of romance and love. For Alex, Paris is where he retreats to lament his most recent failed relationship with a woman named Lydia, and to take up smoking, more for the image he wishes to project rather than any inherent desire for tobacco:

Alex started smoking again whenever he lost a woman. When he fell in love again, he would quit. And when love died, he’d light up again. Partly it was a physical reaction to stress; partly metaphorical–the substitution of one addiction for another. And no small part of this reflex was mythological–indulging a romantic image of himself as a lone figure standing on a bridge in a foreign city, cigarette cupped in his hand, his leather jacket open to the elements.

As he sits down for dinner at a hotel, a young attractive couple intrude on his table and join him as if that is what they were there for. Alex thinks they have mistaken him for someone else, but goes along with them anyway. Frédéric and Tasha discuss New York and their hatred of Paris, drinking and getting to know each other through the false pretence. Alex becomes increasingly intrigued by the attractive, provocative Tasha who casually reveals that she and Frédéric are ex-lovers. The threesome decide to hit the Parisian nightclubs together afterwards, Tasha and Alex becoming more and more physically intimate.

Alex hadn’t been clubbing in several years. After he and Lydia moved in together, the clubs lost their appeal. Now he felt the return of the old thrill, the anticipation of the hunt–the sense that the night held secrets bound to be unveiled before it was over.

After Frédéric has an argument with a bartender, he and Tasha decide to leave, leaving Alex alone. He walks out onto the street, only to meet up with the pair again. They drive around and Alex further considers the loss of Lydia and gets sexually entangled with Tasha on the backseat. The previous suggestion of violence – Tasha biting Alex’s tongue until it bleeds, Alex ripping the wound open – builds up to the climax: Frédéric crashes the car and in the resulting wreckage Alex confronts them about who they think he is, only be verbally eviscerated by Frédéric. Alex gets carried away with this vision of himself through others eyes, from the cigarettes to going along with the mysterious Tasha and Frédéric. He is all illusion and pretence and doesn’t really have much of substance. The tension builds and is released in a cataclysm of violence and decimates Alex’s relentless image of self-importance.

In a fury, Alex kicked him in the ribs, “Who the hell do you think I am?”
Frédéric smiled and looked up at him. “You’re just a guy,” he said. “You’re nobody.”

It may not be mindblowingly amazing writing, but it features the common tropes of McInerney’s stories so far: sex, drugs, rich people with no real concept of anything beyond themselves. And, I kind of like it, because most of these characters are so shallow, their stories are so neatly wrapped up within a few pages. I’m looking forward to reading the rest.