Monthly Archives: August 2008

Richard Morgan, whose latest novel, The Steel Remains, was just released in the UK, has written a terrific article about his novels as the, erm… debacherous content often found within.

The first thing he tackles is a subject I (along with John from Grasping for the Wind and Joe Abercrombie) am familiar with. Swearing.

Not long ago, I received a curious communication through the fan-mail portal of my website. It was from an American reader who’d picked up a copy of my last novel Black Man (or Thirteen as it’s rather more primly known in the US) was about a hundred pages in and had now, he informed me, closed the book and wouldn’t be continuing. Well, them’s the breaks, of course, can’t please everyone – but what fascinated me was this offended reader’s reason for quitting. He was unhappy, he said, with my repeated use of the word “f*ck”.

Now, if you’ve not read Black Man (or indeed any of my other work), this might not, as it stands, seem strange. After all, not everyone likes to hear high-powered expletives slung around in their fiction. But consider here a couple of background details. Black Man begins with the surgical dismembering of a drugged and helpless woman for food. That’s the prologue. By the end of chapter one, elsewhere, our central protagonist has been stabbed, has killed his assailant with his bare hands, and has then gone on to shoot dead another man and woman. The body count dips a bit after this, but there’s an undercurrent of desperation and violence in the book as a whole which means that anyone reaching the hundred page mark has waded through a handful of other murders and a welter of savage hand to hand combat to get there.

All of which was, apparently, just fine and dandy with my offended reader. He had, he insisted, actually been enjoying the book as, and I quote, “a well written and entertaining thriller”. Physical beatings, stabbings, shootings, the odd bit of enforced cannibalism – hell, nothing wrong with any of that, right? All part of the ride. But throw in a few four letter words, and suddenly this guy’s throwing down the book – a book he’s enjoying, mark you, a book he bought and paid for – and will not finish it.

I give up.

Next up: Homosexuality and the sexual habits thereof.

So what’s the stumbling block this time?

The protagonist is gay, and we get to see him in action.

No, really. That’s it.

Well, here I’m tempted to say read the book and decide for yourself. But before you go out and spend your hard-earned money to that purpose, here’s a quick glance over the salient features (and, I guess, a warning for those too tender to face the specifics of the text itself):

There are two explicit male-on-male sex scenes in The Steel Remains, and one male-on- male post-coital conversational scene that might, I suppose, answer to a charge of “risqué”. All three scenes involve front-line protagonists and all three have a significant impact on both the characters involved and the direction of the narrative. The two explicit scenes play off one another to demonstrate emotional growth and a shifting power dynamic within a relationship vital to the central strand of the narrative. The post-coital scene is also, I confess, something of an icebreaker, a slow pass at the protagonist’s sexuality in order to get us ready for what’s to come later. But in general and in all honesty, I’d have to say these are the least gratuitous sex scenes I’ve ever written. In fact, as a straight guy, I wrote this stuff with a depth of clinical detachment and attention to craft that I certainly never needed to deploy when I was writing straight sex scenes in other books. I like to think, of course, that none of the sex in any of my books is “gratuitous”, that it all serves some plot function or other, and that I don’t let my own erotic imagination run away with me. But this is the first time I can be absolutely sure of that fact; I didn’t write this stuff for jollies. In fact, when I was done, I had to run the scenes by a gay male acquaintance for approval, to make sure I was hitting the nail on the head, so to speak. (I was told, incidentally, that what I had written was actually quite arousing for anyone that way inclined; and I confess I feel a quiet, craftsman’s pride in that fact. But no arousal, as far as I can tell.)

Personally, I like sex. Excluding a couple of emotionally painful episodes here and there, pretty much all the sex I’ve ever had has been life affirming and delightful. And I see no reason not to put that sensation, explicitly, into the fiction I write. Properly done and with appropriate precautions, sex is one of the great joys of human existence. You’d no more want to miss out on it than you’d want to give up seeing in colour or feeling the sun and wind on your face, or any other of life’s myriad sensory pleasures. And when it comes to story-telling, I’m no more going to soft-pedal my descriptions of sex than I’m going to cheat my readers of that wind on their face, or cool water at the end of a day’s dusty travel, or the furnace glow of sunset across a bustling cityscape somewhere south.

Morgan rounds things out with violence:

Of course, life – and especially the life of desperate, violent men with swords – is also full of pain. And fiction that attempts to evoke life must deal in that pain. The Steel Remains does so, with an intensity that is brutal and unforgiving (and without reviewer disapproval, it seems). You will not lack for spilled blood or hate or suffering here. But if we don’t mingle the pain in our fiction with life’s pleasures as well, then we are guilty of a crucial misrepresentation of the facts and, worse still, of perpetuating a po-faced, sanitised denial of what life is really about and who we really are. If we do not allow ourselves detailed descriptions of sex in our fiction, then we deny the core significance those acts have in our lives. And if we do not permit those descriptions to extend to gay men, then we deny their right to those same core motivations as everyone else.

I don’t intend to be found guilty of any of those sins. I try to evoke life in my fiction, because it’s the only way I know how to write, and quite honestly I’m not interested in learning another way, no matter how wholesome and safe for sales it might turn out to be. If this makes The Steel Remains controversial or gratuitous, then it is only because it represents a controversy and a gratuitousness that I see in life everywhere I look.

Whether you love or hate his novels, Morgan is well known for pushing the boundaries with his Science Fiction and (now, with the release of The Steel Remains) his Fantasy. Certainly an interesting read.

You can find the whole article HERE.

Courtesy of John from Grasping for the Wind (via Chris The Book Swede Gah! My brain hurts) it looks like the US edition of the fantastic Last Argument of Kings by Joe Abercrombie is shipping almost a month early!

Last Argument of Kings by Joe Abercrombie

If you’ve read the first two volumes of the trilogy, The Blade Itself and Before They Are Hanged, you’re probably already looking forward to the concluding volume. If you haven’t read them, what the hell are you waiting for?!

You can order Last Argument of Kings HERE.

With all this talk about the recent Hugo awards, it’s easy to get caught up in the hype. Kathryn Cramer, though, took the time to compile a list of over one hundred bloody good writers who haven’t won a Hugo.

Some of the notables:

Iain M. Banks
Stephen Baxter
James P. Blaylock
Ray Bradbury
Emma Bull
Jonathan Carroll
John Crowley
Charles DeLint
Mary Gentle
M. John Harrison
Robin Hobb aka Megan Lindholm
Diana Wynne Jones
Graham Joyce
Guy Gavriel Kay
Ian R. MacLeod
China Miéville
Michael Moorcock
Tim Powers
Terry Pratchett
Jeff VanderMeer

Puts things into perspective, doesn’t it? You can find the whole list HERE.

Over at his blog, Enter the Octopus, Matt Staggs asks an interesting question:

I know that there’s been a good many attempts to quantify a “canon” of fantastic literature, but why should we let that stop us now? When I say “quality” fantasy literature, what comes to mind, and why? Let’s say you give me five good examples. After a while, I’ll wade in and give you mine.

I thought it would be fun to ask my readers the same thing.

What are the five most essential Science Fiction and Fantasy novels?