I am delighted to announce that I have a new book coming out in January. Neither fiction nor poetry, "Shrapnel from a Writing Life" isn't easily categorised. Here's an excerpt from the blurb: "Shrapnel from a Writing Life" is not a conventional book. It is neither fiction nor poetry, though it contains elements of both; … Continue reading New book out in January!
Author: Ian Gouge
“Hot Stew”
Having loved Fiona Mozley's Booker-nominated debut "Elmet", I simply wasn't prepared for "Hot Stew". To my mind the two books are so 'chalk and cheese' that they could have been written by different people. Not that "Hot Stew" is a 'bad' book. It isn't. But it is remarkably different in subject matter, style and tone. … Continue reading “Hot Stew”
It will soon be 1984…
Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped.George Orwell, from "1984" Airbrushing history does not make the future any better. … Continue reading It will soon be 1984…
“The Cat and the City”
The premise behind Nick Bradley's "The Cat and the City" is sound enough: a series of short stories or vignettes that are linked together by a range of characters who variously flit in and out of each - and by the appearance of a calico cat in just about every one. The collection starts out … Continue reading “The Cat and the City”
Drawing Breath at the National Trust
Drawing Breath at the National Trust Her voice carries. No full stops she is all conjunctions: 'but' and 'so' and 'yet' and 'and'. Sixty-five years of catching up to do chasing herself through unpunctuated sentences. And then the crows come to pick at crumbs from the cheese scone taken an age to eat, minor mouthfuls … Continue reading Drawing Breath at the National Trust
Brave new world?
Thirteen months ago I stepped off the edge of a cliff. In my post "The Daunting Prospect of Reinvention" I described how I was about to leave my most recent job - well paid, professional work - and embark on what had been loosely termed 'the glide path to retirement'. It was, I told myself … Continue reading Brave new world?
Writing Retreats: panning for gold…
I suspect just about everyone who attends a Writers' retreat uncovers a nugget of some kind. Often these priceless finds will be unearthed through informal interaction with other attendees, conversations over dinner, sharing writing experiences - or even experiences of life. At my first retreat four years ago (at Garsdale Retreat in North Yorkshire), my … Continue reading Writing Retreats: panning for gold…
Writing Retreat – mk. 2
The first time I enrolled on a writing retreat I ended up getting the inspiration for - and writing the initial short story of - my collection "Degrees of Separation". Next week I am enthusiastically anticipating my second retreat and hope for a similarly productive outcome! Once more I go into the week with questions … Continue reading Writing Retreat – mk. 2
“The Unconsoled”
When a new novel is published rarely does it polarise opinion as much as Kasuo Ishiguro's "The Unconsoled". For many it was a masterpiece, unlike anything else ever written - for others it was simply not very good and roundly vilified. There seemed to be no middle ground. My own reaction when I started to … Continue reading “The Unconsoled”
“The Lying Life of Adults”
Having read positive reviews of Elena Ferrante's "My Brilliant Friend', when I saw her more recent "The Lying Life of Adults" in the bookshop I didn't hesitate to buy it - it was, I was told, also 'astonishing', 'irresistible', 'intense'. Well, I'm afraid the word that kept popping into my head was 'dull'. More than … Continue reading “The Lying Life of Adults”
