Showing posts with label One Among the Sleepless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label One Among the Sleepless. Show all posts

Saturday, October 20, 2007


Cheerful Man with a Minor Headache

Oooooh! My Head is giving me the dull throb that comes after a night out with visiting chums from England. Went to pub, drank too much, then went to burger restaurant to scoff junk food a-plenty. After a night of indigestion, I wake to mosey around the web while the head aches merrily. Then, something to put the headache out of, or at least to the back of my head, as an impromptu celebration breaks out. One Among the Sleepless has entered the Australian iTunes top ten lit podcasts.

This is the first time I know of that I've risen above The Classic Tales Podcast, which always seems to be at the top of everything, everywhere (so well done, B.J. Harrison). If you haven't listened to that yet, do, it's well worth a listen. Among others, he's done the The Monkey's Paw, which is a wonderfully creepy yarn.

In addition, to Sleepless's charting in Oz, Hall of Mirrors: Tales of Horror and the Grotesque has also entered Australian chart at number 68... which is fab.

So, many thanks to listeners down under. Since the chaps are over for another night, we'll raise a glass of the amber nectar, or more likely the black nectar, to you this evening. Cheers.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Return of the Zazzle panel

I had some trouble with my Zazzle products. I published a typo 'One Among the Sleepeless' that I didn't notice. Then when I did notice I screamed, Homer Simpson-like, and quickly took the panel offline to prevent anyone buying anything (as the typo was pretty hard to see coz your eye is caught up in the design and doesn't expect to see errors, etc).
Anyway, errors are now fixed and One Among the Sleepless merchandise is back online - the ideal gift for the one you REALLY love... yourself, you suave devil. Now, with you wearing this fiendishly attractive gear, all the ladies - or the lads - will run to your house for some funky cold medina. Or some tea and biscuits ... if you're out of medina.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007


Episode 28.2: Autumn Leaves
In a perfect world, Bert Kaempfert would be listening to One Among the Sleepless and he'd email me telling me how thrilled he was to know that I wanted to use his version of Autumn Leaves on Episode 28.2. He'd not only give me his full permission to use it, but he'd tell all his friends about the podcast as well and get them on board. Sadly, Bert is no longer with us, and even if he were, he probably wouldn't have heard of One Among the Sleepless, let alone be up to date with it.
Fortunately though, I have heard of him, and Bert's version of Autumn Leaves (Les Feuilles Mort) has found its way - albeit silently - onto Episode 28.2. Copyright law prevents me from using even a snatch of the track, which is a great shame because it is - to me at least - an integral part of the episode. Still, if they ever make a movie out of this book, hopefully the film company will have no problem wrangling the rights to the song.

Episode 28.2 has taken by far the longest amount of time to put together of any episode so far. The voices - the accents and vocal mannerisms etc have taken me ages to get right. It turns out I was right to post Episode 28.1 last week, as not only would the episode have been gigantic, but it would've been very late also.

The Black Pig, like Shenanigans and The Coach and Horses doesn't exist in Brighton or anywhere else. All these places are like Frankenpubs - the stitched together bits and pieces of both reality and imagination. I mean, if there were a real Shenanigans for example, I'd be in court right now trying to plead ignorance, stupidity or mental illness.

As for my own taste in pubs, I'm a trad-pub man. I think I've always preferred places where people go to drink beer, get themselves a nice comfortable seat and have a good conversation with friends.

My friends have always told me - all my pub going life - that I have the pub tastes of a little old man. I don't think I'm like an old man, I just like to be able to get served quickly, pay a reasonable price for a nice pint, sit down in a comfy seat and be able to hear the person I'm talking to without the aid of an ear trumpet. Does that make me old?

It does?

Oh.

(sighs)

Oh, well.

Speaking of movie versions of One Among the Sleepless, if you have any thoughts on who should play whom, I'd be very interested in hearing your ideas. Mine shall, of course, remain a secret - I don't want to spoil your own mental images of the characters.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007


Finally... Episode 26

So I got home, all gritted teeth and smoke coming out of my ears. I turned on the computer and began the upload and all was going well... until the signal flatlined for no apparent reason after 15 minutes and the upload was cancelled.
After I'd removed from the head from the wall, I began again. After an hour or so it looked like it actually uploaded - the green progress bar went all the way to the end and then went white again. Oh joy! But hang on, the files at Libsyn weren't showing it as present, if it was there, it was invisible. I was just getting ready to run my head into the wall again when a thought occurred to me: why not turn stuff off and then turn it on again? I did so - and good job too: Episode 26 was there. Oh genuine joy!

So, what's the story? Gaz, Jimmy, Glenn, Ted, Kay, Sally and Adam all sitting around the beer garden of Shenanigans. Suspicions, jealousies, doubts, desires and weirdness; and that's all in the first 15 minutes.

Promos: Jack Palms 2: This is Life / The Homegrown Podcast

Wednesday, March 21, 2007


Episode 22: Girls' Talk
Episode 22, late but weighing in at a very healthy 35 minutes, delivered this evening (following two early frustrated upload attempts) after two hours crawling up the slimy pipe that is Irish Broadband. Three conversations in three places that reveal character and back story but more importantly - peel further layers off the onion that is 'One Among the Sleepless'.
I just realised as I was mentally back in the pubs that the episode draws upon as inspiration that the Two Brewers doesn't have the garish walls and jazz musos - that was a pub around the corner from where I used to live in Brighton. It had been a typical old-geezer pub (and fair enough, wasn't doing too well financially) but it became a red-walled, jazz musician gallery about seven years ago. I can't remember the name of it, but the description fits so many places in England now that it could be any one of a million pubs. I mention this only in case you're a Two Brewers regular and find yourself wondering why the walls aren't red.


Promo: How to Disappear Completely by Myke Bartlett

Thursday, February 15, 2007





Episode 18: it's only a podcast episode.
So I should be sitting down and getting on with Episode 18, but instead I'm sitting here and checking sites and getting up and walking around and doing chores and going out and coming back and looking at the mic and playing the same Raveonettes song (Black Wave)over and over again like a mental patient and doing anything and everything but starting Episode 18. Why? I don't know.


Episode 18: I should just start it right now. Just stop writing this and get on with it. I should, but hey, it's nearly time for my wife to get in. Maybe I'll surprise her with a nice hot meal. Yes, I'll cook something really nice, really different: something that takes a long time to cook and involves a lot of time-consuming fuss. And then tomorrow, yes, I'll start #18 tomorrow. And just keep repeating, Episode 18: it's only a podcast episode, it's only a podcast episode, it's only a podcast episode...

Thursday, January 04, 2007


Mick's Chopper: An Extract From Episode 6

Chapter 4

Mick bent down and began to move the small wheels of the number-coded lock that secured the rear wheel of his bicycle to its frame. The underground car park was manned throughout the working day by an attendant, Charlie, but the lock provided Mick with an extra sense of security.
The numbers clicked into place and the lock came apart in his hands. Mick wrapped the chain around the bike-frame beneath the saddle. Of course; if someone were determined to steal the bike, then no chain, nor any number of chains, would make much difference. But then, unlike so many mountain bikes, if someone were to steal Mick’s bike, they’d have a job concealing it beneath anything so transparent as a new coat of paint. For no one else in this town - nor anywhere else he’d seen for miles around - rode a Raleigh Chopper.
The Harley Davidson of the bicycle world, the Chopper was Mick’s single greatest joy in life. Throughout his childhood, he’d pestered his parents to buy him one, but they were pragmatic people. They saw no practical advantages to the strange, hulking contraption that for some curious reason was so adored by their - and indeed most of the nation’s - sons in the 1970s. They felt the racer they’d invested in for young Michael was a splendid machine, and saw no point in buying him another bike. Mick shook his head; how could they have understood the allure of the Chopper? How could they have known that to the young Mick, it was the embodiment of sex, power and freedom.
How he had sullenly sat perched upon his fine, skeletal racer, watching while Chopper owning boys like Malcolm Barnes seduced girls with the prospect of ‘backies’ on those big, padded seats. He recalled now the plastic, beak-like saddle of his racer: how it had felt like the head of an axe between his arse cheeks. No girl would ever want to ride with him on a racer – it wasn’t designed for two.
For one thing, his racer would have been unmanoeuvrable with two people on it, and for another, just supposing he had managed to convince some girl to risk her childbearing future and get on his saddle – where then would he have sat? He couldn’t have done – his skinny arse would just have gone up and down in her face as he pedalled away, and she would’ve had nothing to hang onto – except his skinny arse, and she wasn’t going to do that - not at the tender age of twelve.
How he’d envied boys like Malcolm Barnes, riding around the streets with his black leather gloved hands. One hand on the handle bars, the other dangling casually at his side. His expression said it all: ‘Check me out – I can steer one-handed.’ And he did just that; he used to steer that Chopper leisurely past pubescent young girls who were drawn, moth-like to the colourful iron horse between his legs. They took it in turns to sit on the saddle; their feet dangling on either side of it and their hands on or around his waist as Malcolm took them up and down the street. And then Vicky Rhodes, the hottest girl in the second year, had started going out with Malcolm – not for his looks, but for his Chopper.
Oh, the cruelty. Oh the agonies of burgeoning sexual frustration. He recalled Malcolm, jumping over ramps constructed of planks with one end propped-up on a couple of bricks. How he used to fly for whole inches through the air before the weight of the Chopper brought him back down onto the tarmac. But the distance travelled was irrelevant. It was the spectacle. ‘Put another brick under it,’ cried Malcolm. ‘Prop it up even higher.’ How the girls would gasp. This was Brighton’s very own Evel Kenievel; a daredevil for whom brick quantity was merely an adrenaline barometer.
How Mick had waited, had scrimped and saved the money from his paper round until, at the age of fourteen, he had enough money to buy… a decent cheap stereo; for the times had changed, and now music mattered far more than bicycles. At seventeen, the young worker, he bought a moped. But that had ended in a minor road accident and Mick had gone back to biking it. He’d bought a mountain bike. In some ways, it had reminded him of a Chopper; it had a chunky frame in places; solid wheels, fattish tyres. It was like dating a girl who reminded you of the one you had loved, and lost. Sad really, but then one day, the sadness ended. It was on a drab, commonplace Saturday in May three years ago. He’d been thumbing through old 7” singles in a second hand store when he’d noticed a big red reflector, glowing like the eye of Hal in 2001 – A Space Odyssey, from the shadows at the back of the shop. The singles were suddenly forgotten beneath his fingers as he realised what he was looking at.
Slowly, almost nervously, he’d moved towards it; the classical shape revealing itself to him with every tentative step he’d taken. It was a mauve one, the logo in orange along the crossbar, one word, ‘Chopper’. He reached out and touched the black plastic grips on the handlebars and felt the past wash over him. He’d had innumerable goes on Malcolm’s Chopper, and he knew the touch achingly well. His eyes drank in the details of the bike with the slow appreciation of one who has loved from afar, finally beholding the naked and yielding contours of the adored. The gear shift replete with red grip, the big, chunky tyres with their fine red trim, the kick stand, and of course, the big soft seat with its short, vertical backrest, the silver frame of which continued skyward for another foot or so with no apparent purpose other than simply, looking cool.
He had searched for a price tag and found one dangling from the suspension springs beneath the seat: fifty quid. Bargain. He’d hurried to the shopkeeper and placed a £20 deposit down before rushing off to the nearest cash machine and drawing out the rest of the money. That afternoon, he’d ridden home with one hand on the handlebars and the other dangling casually at his side. ‘Check me out’, he’d thought, smiling like an idiot, ‘I can steer one-handed too’.
‘Check us out,’ Mick whispered now in the gloom of the car park. He ran his hand affectionately over the saddle, giving it a little pat before kicking up the stand. Now in the gloom of the car park, Mick ran his hand affectionately over the saddle, ‘Check us out.’
He mounted the bike and pushed off, heading towards the glow of daylight at the car park’s street entrance. He pedalled lazily past Charlie, exchanging a wave before riding out into the afternoon sun. He reached down between his thighs and shifted up into second gear before turning the Chopper out into traffic.
He had long grown accustomed to the staring of passers-by. Some sniggered, but most, he knew, looked with envy and admiration at his magnificent bicycle. As he had done in childhood, they now pined for the opportunity to cruise the streets on two of the grooviest wheels ever made.

Saturday, December 30, 2006


Number One on Podiobooks (today)

Just a quick one. I noticed that I'm number one on podiobooks.com's 'Most Subscribed To Books of The Last 30 Days' chart. This is only because 'One Among the Sleepless' was added in the last month and such a surge of interest is natural under the circumstances, but still, it's nice while it lasts.
If you aren't a member of Podiobooks yet, why not join? (It's free and easy). Then you can go to my page and give me some stars: obviously 5 for everything would be nice. You can even write a review of the book and start a discusion of it, the reading, the whole thing. It's your big chance to break into literary criticism - and a great opportunity to give me a late Christmas present of 5 stars all the way. So much nicer than socks.

Friday, December 29, 2006



Windfarm
Phew! I've had a hard day's editing and swearing at different video editing software programs. My second 'One Among the Sleepless' video promo is now online at YouTube:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=-TTQATGj1Rc
My nephews-in-law (though both are grown men and could doubtless thrash me in an arm-wrestling match) and I shot this against all odds - high winds and no thermal undies - on Dec 26th while you were all eating cold turkey sandwiches and watching 'Chitty Chitty Bang Bang'.
Now remember folks, this is a promotional video, so if you like it (or the podcast) do me a favour and send the link to your friends and anyone else you think may enjoy it. If I can pick up just one new listener as a result of this promo, then all that standing about half naked in a stiff northerly wind was worth it.