Good eye, good ear

I was pleased to get a mention in Nicholas Royle’s introduction to Best British Short Stories 2015, published by the excellent folk at Salt:

‘In the pages of horror magazine Black Static, Stephen Hargadon loomed into view on two occasions, exploring the boozers, tower blocks and transport routes of Manchester as well as recording its voices; he has a good eye and a good ear.’

The two occasions were World of Trevor (issue 40), which you can read on this site, and The Bury Line, published in issue 42, available from TTA press.

The editor of the collection, Nicholas Royle, roamed the dark corridors, musty libraries and fragrant gardens of the literary world, uncovering gems in some unexpected places. From innumerable little magazines, academic periodicals, anthologies, collections, journals, newspapers, pamphlets, chapbooks and web sites, he plucked what he considered the year’s finest stories and brought them together in one volume. His introductory survey, engaging and shrewd, is well worth a read if you’re interested in the short story and it’s place within the current literary scene.

Authors in the anthology include Hilary Mantel, Jenn Ashworth, Helen Simpson, Charles Wilkinson, Rebecca Swirsky, Matthew Sperling, Julianne Pachico, Katherine Orr, Bee Lewis, Uschi Gatward, Emma Cleary and Neil Campbell. Check it out.

The Visitors

Do yourself a favour and check out the Brown Bear. You know you’re thirsty.

Stephen Hargadon The Visitors

New story The Visitors is published in Black Static 45.

http://ttapress.com/blackstatic/

The March–April issue contains new dark fiction by Steve Rasnic Tem, S.P. Miskowski, Laura Mauro, Stephen Hargadon, Emily B. Cataneo, Andrew Hook, Cate Gardner, and Danny Rhodes. The cover art is by Richard Wagner, and interior illustrations are by Richard Wagner, and Ben Baldwin. The usual features are present, including the regular comment columns by Stephen Volk (Coffinmaker’s Blues) and Lynda E. Rucker (Notes From the Borderland); Blood Spectrum by Tony Lee (DVD/Blu-ray/VoD reviews); Case Notes by Peter Tennant (book reviews), which includes an extensive interview with Helen Marshall.

 

 

Cover art: Black Static 45

Here’s the cover of Black Static 45, with art by Richard Wagner. Out early March. (http://ttapress.com/shop/ if you’re tempted to subscribe.)

Visit the Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/TTAPress

Black Static 45

January Update: World of Hargadon

January has been a busy and productive month. I’ve finished three short stories. (Or rather I finally reached a point where I found their imperfections tolerable, almost likeable. Call it a kind of marriage.)

Most of my recent stories – “World of Trevor”, “The Bury Line” ­– have been urban affairs. John Gray, George Crease, Savoury Vince and others inhabit a zone of sodden pubs and airless offices. Thrusters, topers, mumblers, texters: they breathe the sullied air of the city, its spores and dirt.

One of my new stories, however, takes place in the north-west of Ireland, where the raw Atlantic brawls and roars along the coast. It’s a landscape I know well, having spent many a long summer there as a child. Damp rooms and pictures of Jesus. Red lemonade and soda bread. Cowpats, silage, incessant rain. But it wasn’t these memories that drove the story. It is based on an old Irish myth.

With my second January production, I returned to more familiar territory. A love-affair (of sorts) set in the type of ordinary, concrete and glass office-block we see in most cities. (Or perhaps we don’t see them at all.)

The third story features, among other delights, an encounter in a fried chicken shop.

The stories are out there now, in the ether, looking for a home, a refuge. I’ll let you know if any of them find shelter.

Earlier this month I took the train to London. I visited two exhibitions: Terror and Wonder – The Gothic Imagination at the British Library and the Institute of Sexology at the Wellcome Collection. Both were highly enjoyable. The Institute of Sexology runs till September 2015 and is free to enter. So if you’re ever strolling along the Euston Road and fancy something stimulating, the Wellcome is well worth a visit. Natty cafe and shop, too.

I have not bought any new clothes. This is not really a resolution. More a vague aim. I reacquaint myself with those hardly-worn shirts at the back of the wardrobe. I tell myself that not buying clothes is a very eco-friendly, earth-loving thing to do. But it is probably no more than the start of a rampant miserliness. By the end of the year I will be reduced to digging out ever more obscure items from the wardrobe, from under the bed: I’ll be drinking my fruit mocktail in the Ape and Apple wearing pink swimming trunks and a leather poncho. Please note: accessories do not count as clothes. So I will no doubt acquire a scarf-a-day habit. I’ll be bandaged in scarves, a Tootal mummy.

I continue to amass books. The other day I popped into Oxfam on Oldham Road. I merely wanted to escape the cold. I came out with Astrid Proll’s Baader Meinhof: Pictures on the Run 67-77, a first edition of Burgess’s MF (with dustjacket), and a cheeky little volume on saucy seaside postcards. They join the ever-expanding, ever-rising ziggurat of unread books . . . Derek Raymond’s He Died With His Eyes Open and A State of Denmark; Walls by Marcello Di Cintio; The Drinker, Hans Fallada; Another Part of the Wood, Beryl Bainbridge; Nightmare Movies, Kim Newman; Nightmare Alley, William Lindsay Gresham; DF Lewis’s The Last Balcony (signed); John Collier; Knausgaard; Woody Allen;  Gogol; Stephen King; Vivid Faces by RF Foster;  This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen by Borowski; Lee Rourke’s The Canal;  Ann Quin, Berg; Randall by Gibbs; Nikil Saval’s Cubed; Elspeth Davie’s The High Tide Walker. And the list of the Unread keeps growing. One night, as I lie in bed, these books, the great Unread, will rise from their dusty shelves and entomb me.

But before I sleep I must work. I must get back to the real stuff. And so should you.

Trev’s Free

For a few days only, ‘World of Trevor’ is free here. So if you know someone who needs a bit of Trev in their life, this is your chance to point them in the right direction. They’ll thank you for it. The Gents? Down the stairs on your left.

Merry Trevor

Looking for something to while away the time as you sup your fifth pint of Diamond during an aborted shopping trip? A Christmas gift for that picky loner in your life? Perhaps you’re not sure what to get the family toper? Or for the woman who has everything and nothing? Or are you simply seeking a dark, disturbing bedtime read as seasonal revellers scream and sing outside? Then step this way, ladies and gentlemen, into the World of Trevor . . .

World of Trevor is now available as an ebook. Buy here.

Remember: Trevor is for life, not just Christmas.

 

Voices

Overheard in the clogged and narrow streets of Manchester:

“If you go, have a look for Ken’s bench, it’s lovely . . .”

“. . . there was rice, like sticky rice, with sort of vegetables and other stuff in it and an egg on top. You could see the yolk, so I was a bit, you know, hmm at first, but I put some chilli sauce on it and it was all right, actually . . .”

“I’ve got an orange one, it’s nice.”

“I saw that, too. It was very well done. It kept me awake.”

“What did we do before Greggs?”

“Only Wednesday, not that I’m wishing my life away . . .”

“I wish I could dress him up like he was my boyfriend.”

“Don’t know why they bother with MPs, no one wants them, do they?”

“I’m not going the doctor. If I go the doctor, I’ll never come out.”

“Hanging. That’s proper hanging.”

“Geoffrey’s all right for running gear, but it’s his shirts I worry about.”

“Last time I had mulled wine I ended up buying a jumper for sixty quid.”

“Fuck this, let’s go to Stockport.”