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Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 December 2022

THE BLOODING OF JACK ABSOLUTE - Book review


 C.C. Humphreys’ 2005 prequel to Jack Absolute (2004) The Blooding of Jack Absolute is enlightening and as enjoyable as the first novel, which I read in its year of publication. I’m rather late in reading this next book, which has been on my shelf all this time! I’m glad I’ve finally got round to it.

The book begins in Cornwall in 1752, where young Jack is constantly subjected to beatings and whipping from his bullying cousin Craster and Crater’s father Duncan Absolute. Jack’s father and mother’s appearance turns on the fateful demise of Duncan and their unexpected good fortune, and so Jack is taken off to London to live with his once-impoverished parents, soldier and retired actress. We then leap to 1759 and Jack, when not drinking, carousing and gambling, is studying – including French with the beautiful Clothilde.

There’s plenty of humour to be had in the various situations Jack finds himself in: ‘As his mother said, these days every man styled himself a critic’ (p70). And Jack and his fellow students embark on a risky mission, availing themselves of the Whores’ Directory, Harris’s List of Ladies. On meeting Mr Harris, ‘Jack kept any distaste from his voice, ever the actress’s child’ (p89).

While Jack is in love with Clothilde, it is with Fanny Harper, the kept woman of Lord Melbury, that he indulges his sexual appetite. There’s an amusing scene where Jack is hiding beneath the hooped skirts of Fanny as Melbury unexpectedly enters the room; farce but with the promise of threat and danger to follow.

Throughout we’re entertained with acute descriptions. John Burgoyne, for example: His eyes were ‘deep-set, of a grey that pushed to blue, his hair a brown that stopped just short of black. It was exquisitely unostentatiously styled, making Jack wish to run his fingers through his own ill-laid hedgerow. Burgoyne's clothes were of an equally simple elegance, rich material precisely cut, brilliantly dyed… (he) was ancient, thirty-five if he was a day’ (p91).

In the previous book Jack fought a duel; he does so in this earlier escapade – but not with weapons but on the green baize of a snooker table!

For certain reasons, Jack is helped by Burgoyne to join the dragoons and is shipped off to Canada in 1759. Here he is involved in the assault on Quebec by scaling the heights of Abraham.

Jack is captured by Natives who do not look kindly upon him. ‘Suddenly, the little curiosities shop in Knaves Acre (London) came into his head. He could not understand why, until he remembered that it was full of body parts that he had ogled and pawed and wondered at. Now, in the way that they were looking at him, he felt he was about to become an exhibit himself’ (p230).

Here, too, he finally kills his first enemy – the ‘blooding’. If you’ve read the earlier book, you’ll be aware that he has a Native blood-brother, Até. Here it is explained how Até began as a foe and ended up fighting alongside Jack – and not least learning all of Hamlet and quoting from it often: ‘Até’s propensity for applying Hamlet to any and every situation was starting to annoy Jack’ (p282).  

Humphreys is adept at describing scenes of battle. But he is also good at describing flora, fauna – and the weather, for example when he wakes to find a fresh fall of snow: ‘… a rush of excitement, memories of childhood, waking like this not to sound but to its absence, to the silence of a world wrapped and muffled… Soft, separate flakes, huge as cherry petals, were still drifting down from a sky showing a hint of dawn’ (p233).

There is a third Jack Absolute book, Absolute Honour (2006); I won’t be taking so long to get round reading that one! And there’s a prequel short story (about 37 pages), only available on Kindle, The Birth of Jack Absolute, relating the adventures of Jack’s mother and father!

It would seem that Chris Humphreys is now resorting to self-publishing – Two Hats Creative Inc – which might show where publishing is going; if an accomplished, eloquent excellent page-turning author seeks this option, it does not bode well for other potential new authors.

Monday, 8 August 2016

Book review - The Enemy I Kill



Alexander Knox, the well-known actor, had written two novels and three plays prior to this adult adventure yarn (1972). The story is set in the area of the Great Lakes of Canada in 1770. Seventeen-year-old Calvin Heggie, fairly fresh from Berwick-on-Tweed, is fired from his post with the Hudson’s Bay Company and finds himself isolated in the wilds.


He’s fearful of Indians, yet manages well enough when encountering three old warriors who seem harmless enough, even amusing and witty. A short while later, he meets up with a man called Red and two very attractive Indian girls, Moonluck and Kittypet. Before long, they come to an island and enjoy an idyllic life; soon he is bathing naked with these three and loses his virginity: ‘She was the first woman and he was the first man… The island lurched about, churning his teeth, bones, brains and guts, and erupted into what he recognised quite clearly, even at such a time, as the creation of a vast new life. Nothing as small as a baby, or himself, but a whole new universe.’ (p84)

Knox spent his childhood in Canada and was steeped in the traditions he wrote about. He brings observant descriptive power to the natural world that Calvin and the others inhabit: ‘The flock was two miles wide – so wide it concealed a lake, so dense it cast on the hills a moving shadow, blacker than the shadows of the clouds. The immense flock settled slowly and was swallowed by the tree-tops.’ (p51)

Overshadowing their idyll is the thought that the families of the two girls are searching for them. And then there’s the rumour that the warrior Longhair is abroad, even though he was supposedly killed. Their glorious summer is marred by capture and horror, and gruesome torture involving genitalia, while women and children look on: ‘The pain of a foreigner isn’t really pain, he thought.’ (p208)

Some scenes are not for the squeamish. Yet there are moments of tenderness as well as violence, dry humour, insanity and despair.  

Knox died in Berwick-on-Tweed in 1995, aged 88.

Thursday, 13 August 2015

Writing – market – Muffled Scream

First Muffled Scream Anthology from Canadian small press Wicked Tales. Editor is Douglas Owsen.

Short Stories ranging from 3,000 to 20,000 words.

The theme = “Corner of the Eye”. 
Wikipedia commons

Deadline: August 31, 2015.

How to submit.
Your short story and a small two paragraph bio of yourself, supplied with your manuscript, attached to an email entitled “Short Story Submission – Muffled Scream” indicating which anthology you are submitting (ie Corner of the Eye) to the email address in the website:


The email address is set to delete emails with no attachments. If you have a question, use the ‘contact us’ form. Don’t run the risk of not having your short story published. And do remember to include your bio; several short stories were received without one, and your submission will be returned if one is not included.

They will accept first time authors!

Payment
All short stories are paid at $0.01 per word (after editing) up to a maximum of $150.00. All payments will be made via PayPal and in the first quarter of publication. Then, if the issue your story is included in breaks a profit, 50% of the net profit will be shared between the contributors on a per word basis for two years after the publication date.

Rights
The author retains all rights to their submitted short story. The story may not be published with another publisher or self-published in any form for one year after the publication of the anthology’s release date.

Good luck!

Monday, 1 September 2014

Writing - Market - On Spec

If you like writing speculative fiction, sci-fi or a variant, then this magazine might be worth considering.

 
Their next issue is themed for STEAMPUNK, CYBERPUNK, BIOPUNK. As their website states, these and many other types of ‘punk’ derivatives have become popular sub-genres of speculative fiction. What classifies them as ‘punk’ are a number of literary devices that include:
1) Setting: specific technologies associated with particular ‘ages’, ‘societies’ and/or time frames (both the past or future) – eg. the Victorian Age often defines Steampunk (but not always). Nanotech experiments of the future may define Biopunk, (but again, not always).
2) Tone: a sense of novelty, or being on the cutting edge of that particular technology, within its time frame.
3) Style: language and/or a narrative style specific to that particular technology, reflective of the time, and/or writers of that time.
4) Characterization: wide open. Characters can reflect their time and the concerns of their place in that time, or be transplants from another time and/or genre.


Sub-genres include, but aren’t limited to: Atompunk, Biopunk, Clockpunk, Cyberpunk, Decopunk, Dieselpunk, Dreampunk, Mythpunk, Nanopunk, Steampunk, Stonepunk, and others.

For further definitions, this Wikipedia link on ‘Cyberpunk Derivatives’ may prove helpful.

Their reading period is short – 1 September to 15 October. 

They have a style sheet format to follow, so stick to that. 

Payment is in Canadian dollars, viz:

Fiction (6000 words max.)
·         1000-2999 words: $125 plus 2 contributor’s copies plus a One year subscription
·         3000-4999 words: $175 plus 2 contributor’s copies plus a One year subscription
·         5000-6000 words: $200 plus 2 contributor’s copies plus a One year subscription

They also publish poetry.  Please check out their site for more information:

http://onspecmag.wordpress.com/

Friday, 16 May 2014

FFB - Jack Absolute - a new historical hero

Jack Absolute (2004) is the first in a trilogy of books by C.C. Humphreys. The period of the American Revolution – and in particular the year these events take place, 1777 - is filled with adventure and intrigue, when the English troops and the rebels recruited Native Americans to their cause. And of course the French, still smarting at being bested in Canada, are only too keen to side with the rebels to wrest the colony from the Crown. It is a time when colonial families are split, some being loyal to the Crown while others want freedom. Into this powder-keg strides a new and most welcome hero, Jack Absolute.

Jack has an interesting history, although we only snatch a few glimpses of it in this eponymous novel, which promises to be the first of a series. Several years before the events in this book, Jack was captured then adopted by the Iroquois, learning their language and way of life. Now, he is recruited to rally these warriors to the Crown’s cause.

Unfortunately, there’s a spy in the English army and Jack must also find this spy and kill him.

Well-researched, exciting and a quick read, Jack Absolute contains plenty of ingredients to keep your interest. Clearly knowledgeable about sword-play, Humphreys inflicts a London duel on his hero at the beginning of the story and this contest echoes and haunts Jack even in the new continent. Canadian author Humphreys is an actor and it was while playing Jack Absolute in Sheridan’s The Rivals that he became captivated by the character. The man wouldn’t let him be, so eventually he conceded and this adventure is the result. Thus Jack returns from adventuring in India to find his name and earlier exploits have been used by Sheridan in his new play...

There are apt literary allusions, a poignant love story, believable and vicious fighting, humour and irony and a magnificent foil for Jack in the guise of his Native blood-brother Até.

Discovering this character reminds me of those long-ago heady and exciting days when I first found Cornwell’s early Sharpe novels. Jack Absolute has that same page-turning quality and definitely provides sheer reading pleasure.

The other two books are The Blooding of Jack Absolute (2005), which is a prequel, and Absolute Honour (2006).
 

Sunday, 16 March 2014

Noir mix - Crime fiction and tattoos


Noir Nation 4 - International Crime Fiction is now out in Kindle; paperback due to follow.

Noir Nation is the only crime fiction journal in the world that combines international crime fiction and tattoos. It's content is often dark, hard-boiled, sometimes creepy, but because it embraces crime fiction in all its forms, readers can also find the occasional humorous story or cozy mystery.

Noir Nation No. 4 -- The Canada Issue -- has over 20 entries from some of the very best literary crime fiction writers in the international scene, among them Lauren Cahn, Marina Perezagua, Richard Godwin, Jonathan Sturak, Melodie Campbell, Bianca Bellova, Joseph Lepis, Neliza Drew, Rob Brunet, Nik Morton, Chloe Evans, Bruce H. Markuson, Jeffery Hess, Tony Haynes, Mike O’Reilly, Gerald Seagren, Edward McDermott, Ryan Priest, Peter Anderson, Al Cerda, Joseph Trigoboff, and Mary Agnes Fleming. (Official blurb)

This issue is dedicated to Kofi Awoonor (1935-2013), Ghanaian poet, who was murdered by terrorists in the attack on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, September 2013. Men with guns may end lives, but they can't silence the words that live after the victims.

My story 'Sleep Well, My Darling' has gained the subtitle 'Buying a bed can land you in deep water' which appeals to me, I must admit, considering the noir subject...

The story begins:

Graham Turner first suspected his brother John’s death wasn’t accidental when he attended the funeral.

Each article, short story or poem is interspersed with colourful tattoo art.