The Universe Of Things, Storynotes


My second story collection from The Aqueduct Press was published at the beginning of January 2011, but distribution has been delayed (due to the extreme weather). My copies reached me yesterday. Not totally sure about that weighty introduction, I may prefer the PS publishing one in Grazing The Long Acre, but I still love the cover image. Many thanks to Kath Wilham for following my suggestion up and sourcing it, plus many thanks to CERN Educational, for letting us use it.

 

In The Forest Of The Queen: The Monsec American Monument is a real place. The forest in the story is a real place, and cropped for firewood by the commune, just as described. We drove into it, we left our car at a meeting of green, smoothly mown, thickly tree-bordered tracks; just as described. We walked into the trees, and were walking over ground that was hopping with tiny dark-skinned frogs. Never seen so many little frogs. We got a little lost, and that felt a little strange: we found ourselves again, and there was (but this was at a different forest margin) an old French forester who said "You can go in, but you may not come out". Back in the car, for a while it was touch and go: so many crossing trails, and surely far more trees than we'd passed on the way in. We knew we'd escaped when we reached the cottage converted into a bat refuge, but I wondered if maybe everything had changed; if this was really the same world as we'd left. The rest is fiction.

I've sought these liminal, uncertain experiences all my life. The most developed example I've written up as fiction is a novel called Kairos. It's that Arthur Machen feeling, it's what the term numinous actually means; and you should ask my brother David about it.


Total Internal Reflection. An early try out for the tech and drug mediated Grail idea.


Red Sonja And Lessingham In Dreamland. It's about Red Sonja, ie Brigitte Nielson (a favourite movie). It's about Lessingham, as in the heroic fantasies of Eric Rucker Eddison (he shared private tutors with Arthur Ransome as a boy, but I'm sure you knew that). Someone once told me that Eddison fans in the US found it "very offensive". I'm sorry if anyone felt that way, I meant no harm. I'm a devout Eddison fan, I even admire Mistress of Mistresses, which sotake as a mark of true dedication. When he was a very small boy, my son was extremely keen on the Ballantyne cover for The Worm Ouroboros. He begged me to read the book to him. I warned him, but he insisted, so I did. Didn't miss a word. Red Sonja is mainly supposed to be funny, with a sneak-out ending that finally refuses to condemn the dubious escapism fun, but I think its popularity rests on the fact that it is, inevitably, also mildly porny. Probably the most anthologised Gwyneth Jones story, which of course isn't saying much.

The Universe Of Things This one used to be called "The Mechanic", which may have been a better title. The city is Liverpool, by the way. Don't know if I mentioned that in the narrative.


Blue Clay Blues. A Johnny Guglioli story. At the time of writing White Queen, I worked up a future USA that didn't seem remotely likely, just for the hell of it, and in response to the Cyberpunk-Eighties version of near-future Europe. I knew I didn't know anything like enough about the US to work up a likely future, so I didn't try. Ironically, apparently, it stands up. I wrote this story because I wanted to use the lines "Is that a gun in your pocket?" "No, it's a spare diaper."


Grazing The Long Acre Somehow this got into one of Steve Jones's horror anthologies. I don't know how, pure kindness on Steve's part, most likely. This is not a horror story, this is a Polish story. It is not a mundane story either: it is obviously and very Polishly a story about an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Virgin of Czestochowa in fact. I wondered what The Immaculate Conception would look like, to a part-Jewish American girl who was trying to be Lauren Bacall in To Have And Have Not, and this is the result. The working girls on the E75 are real, or they were. Grazing has been translated into Polish, and published in Nowa Fantastyka, and I'm pleased about that.


Collision. I signed up to write a story for Geoff Ryman's anthology When It Changed. The main attraction was that I would be shadowing a scientist, the way I shadowed Dr Jane Davies for Life, the way I've sneaked myself into a few real world scientific/academic conferences, over the years. It turned out that I couldn't visit my scientist, who had promised to let me see a real (medical) particle accelerator roaring in its cage, as the trip would be too expensive. Then it turned out that Geoff, which through lack of paying attention I hadn't known, was not just using a title that happened to sound the same, he was actually referencing the iconic Joanna Russ, seventies-feminism ur-text "When It Changed", and saying his Scientific Revolutions anthology was inspired by that story. Geoff, if you're reading this, I'm sorry. The other contributors are free to do what they like: me, I'm going to have to write something about a feminist/post-gendered Utopia under threat from the Return Of The Sex-Role Dinosaur Police. And time was running out. So "Collision" was a bit of a scrambled egg, but in the end I sort of liked the result. Plus I loved "meeting" Dr Kai Hock (Dr Fortune) virtually. He's a star; also loved finding out about wake fields & all that from his online powerpoints.

One Of Sandy's Dreams Sandy Brize is a character from Kairos.


Gravegoods The first unequivocally scifi story I ever wrote, the first I ever got published, and the ur-form of the means of faster than light travel later to be known as a Buonarotti Transit. I took it to my second UK Milford week, in 1986. The delightful alien planet is Madeira.


La Cenerentola Won the BSFA short story award, in 1999 I think it was, which was a very pleasant surprise. A love song to the summers of the nineties, when I travelled (on a less well-heeled scale) much the way Thea and Suze and Bobbi travel, around the sunbaked Mediterranean. Isn't it interesting to look back, and see a world where the danger of having everything seemed like a real threat. The night at L'Ecureuil, with the flamenco guitar, and the mayor with her little shoes, is taken from life. Also the hangover.


Grandmother's Footsteps. This was written for an anthology about haunted houses, but the haunted house seems almost incidental now. I believe I was writing at the time of a grim chemical pollution discovery in the UK (Was it Lindane? That wood treating stuff?). The horrible revelation that your child is doomed to a short life in pain, because you painted the barn with something you didn't know was deadly... and this segues, naturally, if you're writing a horror story, into the awful suspicion that everything, every greedy thoughtless thing your civilisation ever did to the world, everything that made you prosperous, is going to turn around and savage your babies. That's when you start being haunted by yourself. An existential yuppie nightmare.


The Earlier Crossing This was a dream, I dreamed it, word for word. So to speak. I was working with the Continuing Education Department at our local University (late lamented, it's been axed), encouraging ordinary folk to do some creative writing, the result was to be a book, and everybody involved had to pitch something in.


The Eastern Succession Now where is this set? I think it's set on the slopes of Mount Bromo, although there's no active volcano on the summit above "Temple Pass" in the story. I recognise the town; I remember staying in that town, in a wooden-walled room, the pillows and sheets on the bed crusted with embroidery, that left patterns on my ears. It's central Java anyway, and Bu Awan is Mount Merapi, but the bas-reliefs as described are in a temple near Solo. Endang was the name of someone we met, a dance student, she was a girl, but in Javanese boy/girl names aren't exclusive. When I first wrote Divine Endurance, while living in Singapore, I went on to write several "Derveet and the gang" stories. DE the novel is as stylised as Javanese dance-drama. The emotions are real and intense, everything else is stage: same as European style ballet, in fact. I wanted that effect but I thought I'd also like to have the characters in their street clothes, and find out what really happened to the men and boys. I wasn't satisfied with the "Derveet" stories and discarded most of them. I thought this was more successful, and I took it along to my first UK Milford. Another one, much altered and with Endang brought in as a character, finally became the novel called Flowerdust.

On Mount Bromo I met, and became short-term dear friends with, fully adult human beings, men and women, the top of whose heads barely came to my collarbone, and I'm 162cm. I think of those "hobbits" on Flores, and I think they didn't entirely die out.


The Thief The Princess And The Cartesian Circle
. This is from the collection called "Seven Tales And A Fable", published by Steve Pasechnik (of the late lamented Edgewood Press) in 1996. My fractured fairytales (though they were often taken out of the box, revised and some of them published separately over the years between), date back to my undergraduate days at Sussex University. The Thief is not a personal favourite. I prefer "The Snow Apples", an early try-out for a character who would become Cho, the "innocent, perfect and incorruptible" metagenetic gynoid. Or "Laiken Langstrand", if only because the lanky blue-eyed blond friend who inspired it is dead now. But it's possibly the most interesting and most hard-hitting. I was working with fairytales, bringing them into collision with the real world, seeing what interesting fractures might develop, and I'm a long time admirer of I Never Promised You A Rose Garden, by Hannah Gordon (alternate title of another of the stories). In the real world, a young woman who believes she's a magic princess, suffering under an evil enchantment, probably has mental health problems. The passage where Jennifer experiences a psychiatric hospital as a wild wood, and a corrupt, sexually abusive doctor as a "woodcutter" her "magic" may easily destroy, is closely related to Gordon's description of how the psychotic yet beloved world of "Yr" interpenetrates the real, in her schizophrenic protagonist's perception. The Descartes part is not fiction: that's me, at nineteen, wrestling with an angel.


Identifying The Object
. A Johnny and Braemar story, narrated by a somewhat holier than thou observer. This story is a mash-up. I had never been to West Africa when I wrote it. The incident at the heart, the supposed alien craft splash-down site, actually happened in Madeira, it was one of those liminal experiences. Of course what we found was the spoor of a flash flood. It was flood water that had created the huge, weird, circular depression paved in red clay, flood water that had brought down the trees all around. But for a moment or two, well, we were on the brink... The original African connection was a terrific dubious escapism romance called The Golden Centipede, by Louise Gerard (1910). When I finally reached West Africa in 1995 (expedition to climb Mt Cameroon) I was stunned to find it was exactly the place Gerard describes. I thought she'd made it all up. The white lilies that grow in the river mud! The flowery natural "gardens", up in the highlands! The weird peaks! Bit short on wildlife these days, but you can't have everything. I was trying to work out something about colonialism, and how does it happen? How do the gold empires vanish? In this story Braemar and Johnny, natives of the planet about to be colonised; realising they're doomed to become inferior beings, decide (she decides) to go down (pre-emptively) fighting. If it was as simple as that, I would sign up myself. But Anna thinks it is not.


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