I’ve always said I’d never go to writers’ festivals and true to my word, I never have. The mere thought of sitting in a room filled with writers fills me with a deep sense of anguish.
There might only be one thing worse, a room full of actors. Boy, are they hard work.
When introduced to actors — “She/he is in the theatre, don’t you know?”— and if sufficiently oiled, I clasp their hands and tell them, “The Theatre? Is that still around? Wonderful. I would have thought colour television would have seen it off. Good on you. That’s the spirit. Never give up.”
It seems to keep them at bay.
I’ll let you into a little secret. Writers, like actors, are sometimes vaguely interesting, often horrendously boring but always hopelessly, relentlessly self-absorbed. I have seen scribblers lapse into speaking of themselves in the third person, weighing up their remarks with extravagant gravity and no apparent sense of self-consciousness of the arses they are making of themselves.
Perhaps this why the Melbourne Writers Festival turned into a dog-and-pony show this year, featuring a bunch of non-literary mad escapades. Anything to avoid the ugliness of writers talking about themselves.
We’re an odd breed, to be honest. I like the company of people, don’t get me wrong, but I am just as happy on my own. Writing is a solitary affair with long hours strapped to a keyboard. Like most jobs it is often a chore and only occasionally joyful. Even the pleasure of a near perfect paragraph is one that goes unshared at least for the time being.
I have always said that if you wrote books for money, you’d find setting up a sewing machine in the garage and taking in a little piece work more profitable. The hourly rate would not pass muster by the Fair Work Commission.
Having trousered my 12 cents an hour, I am about to finish my fourth book, an exposition into one of the most darkly funny episodes in Australia’s criminal history. I am just getting to the final denouement. It is the time of Sydney’s Gang Wars of 1984-85.
The punch board in my home office contains photographs of gangsters, petty criminals, crooked cops and bent politicians leering back at me while from the adjoining wall, the portrait of mass murderer, John Frederick ‘Chow’ Hayes, painted by the great Bill Leak, stares ominously down.
It is unsurprising, therefore, that the few who venture into my office tend not to stay very long. I did have a family friend wander in, clock ‘Chow’ on the wall and remark that he seemed like a kindly old man but to be fair she was in wine at the time.
When writing about crooks and often as them, one has to assume their characteristics, their absurd grandiosity, their rat cunning and their violent instincts. It might be seen as method writing, an immersion into a darkness from which there is little respite.
A few days ago, my wife returned home from work. She had been expecting some mail.
“Has the postie been?”
I shook my head. He was late again.
“Maybe,” I said. “We should have him knocked.”
I was joking, of course, but my wife gave me that look that said, “You need to finish the book and get the hell out of that office.”
A few years ago, I interviewed Graham Henry, a criminal associate and on-again-off-again mate of Neddy Smith. Henry appeared in Blue Murder played by Peter Phelps.
I asked Henry what he thought of Phelps’ portrayal and it was the only time in the interview he lost his cool. He was unconcerned about the gruesome crimes he was shown to be involved in, the unspeakable acts of violence he was seen to have committed or even if Phelps’ craft had uncovered some previously unexplored truth.
Rather, Henry, a spiffy dresser in the manner of a racetrack pimp, was deeply shocked that Phelps played him dressed in leisure wear.
“I’ve never worn a tracksuit outside the house in my life,” a visibly hurt Henry said.
From a writer’s perspective, the great paradox is the people who commit violent offences are in many ways just like you and me. They drink too much, tell stories and laugh out loud. They care less about their own futures than they do about their children. But then they engage in criminal behaviour that we could not contemplate.
The maxim of the two certainties of life being death and taxes does not apply to these characters. They don’t pay tax for a start. I mean, if you kill people for money or use murder to advance your status, the prospect of an ATO audit isn’t going to hold any major concerns.
A violent death, ‘fully airconditioned’ as hitman, Christopher Dale ‘Rentakill’ Flannery euphemistically referred to the ghastly business of death at the end of a gun, is merely a vocational hazard. Unpleasant and unwelcome certainly but the greatest fear and almost always a certainty is jail.
One or two from that era did manage the improbable feat of avoiding the clutches of the law and died peacefully in their own beds but for the most part the others either languished in prison before being wheeled out on gurneys feet first, or ceased being active criminals and spent the rest of their lives in intellectual and economic poverty.
It is too easy to portray gangsters as gormless psychopaths and in almost all cases, it is false. They have wives and children. They are capable of love, empathy and sometimes even experience remorse.
What they are masters at is compartmentalising their criminality, like a great big box they shove their worst behaviours into which, in turn, allows them to say, terrorise an innocent person at gun point, jump a counter and grab the loot before going home for a meal with the family.
I have read a lot of true crime stuff, from the tedious date, time and place bulletins to the miserable mea culpas from celebrity gangsters. Criminals are sometimes glorified, more often prosaically condemned but rarely, in this genre, do they appear human.
I think I have managed to get the balance right but who knows? I certainly won’t until the publishers have cast an eye over the manuscript. That won’t happen until I’ve finished the wretched thing and emerge from the darkness.
Right now, I’d better get on with it. There’s a lot more mayhem to come and I’ve just noticed the postie is late again.
As an aussie cricket fan I’m warming to this new lose at all costs ethos. As are the players. Keep this up and we wont have to pay a mozza to get in, buy cold hot chips, drink twice drunk light beer out of an environmentally unfriendly plastic cup, or walk 750 metres up and down Everest just to engage with some tobacco. Take the family and you’d wish you got cut years back. And if we are talking about the administrators, then enough said. Top heavy and too much fat around the middle. This looks like a job for Superman, aka John Howard.
Erm, actually Milton you don’t have to do any of those things. It’s never been compulsory.
But! If if is your wont to sit on your arse all day watching a bunch of multi millionaires hitting a ball with a stick or chasing it then you deserve even worse botheration.
Enjoy yourself while you can, the day will come when you really will have to walk up and down Mt Everest to have a fag. I’d pay uncomplaining to watch that.
You want to get in more, Jean.
That didn’t work.
A room full of golfers, real estate persons, accountants………………….. would be infinitely worse surely?
Any further news on your Upcoming “Rapture” Workshop, Mr. Baptiste. One is always ready to improve and perhaps get ready for the “hereafter”. Cheers P.S. do we need to bring a Pencil?
A pencil? Not a bad idea Henry. You can make additions to the list of sins for which you wish to confess that has been pre-submitted. Actually, bring a swag of ruled foolscap notepads as well. You have made an awful lot of posts on this blog.
Whop it up ’em.
Infinitely worse JB.
Add carsalesmen or bankers…& I’d struggle to stay awake. 😴
Hmmn, carsalesmen are some of the most creative and hyperactive liars on planet Bella. Never boring.
Voting underway as we speak, Mr insider as those New Caledonian Peoples vote in a Referendum to break away from France and become Independent. Possible results tonite, Sunday.
My guess is that if they do become Independent that China will zero in on them.
Its a “no brainer” New Caledonia, do you want to speak French or Chinese and what impact will this have on Australia?
I am punting they stay French.
https://tinyurl.com/ybs6t764
“Viva La France” Mr. Insider the New Caledonians remain French! Good for Australia too.
https://tinyurl.com/ycmtoyob
I say Jack, the postie being late may well be an ominous sign in itself.
Although the old maxim ‘better late than never’ may be a natural fallback position, consider the possibility of hearing a muffled whistle in proximity to your mail receptacle, followed by the gurgling sound of a plasma laden liquid, not unlike the broken current of a burbling brook .
BTW have you checked the front gate lately for any discarded crimson colored envelopes?
PS. the ‘crim …’ is quite coincidental.
That’s a rare talent you have there Carl. Could you please describe the victim of an arch criminal run over by a steam roller on the footpath? Don’t spare the sound effects. Start from the feet, I don’t want any muffled objections.
Yeah …. like a Dominos meat lovers pizza. Thin crust with lots of streaky bacon.
Embellish please.
Mozzarella.
Your first showed so much promise.
This may interest some:
http://takimag.com/article/stoking-the-fire/#axzz5VrRtc2YV
We are off to the big bout Friday 30th Milton. Sneaky Mundine has been seen training in the US and our Jeff knows how good those US Boxers are!
Could end up a farce but for Horn’s sake its a “must win”. Cheers
Uninteresting flogged to death simplistic cant. But whatever floats your boat………..
JB it is an obvious typo but I must say ‘language please’! He may be simplistic but calling him a cant is beyond the pale!
Chuckle! At you least we agree on the “uninteresting flogged to death” bit, even though he is clearly a cant.
You’d wanna be quick to get this on the shelves before xmas!
And despite the negatives, such as the solitary nature of the work, the plus side for many writers, even well known ones, over actors is the relative anonymity. Of course writers festivals may be a cunning plan to end that.
I doubt many actors would see anonymity as a plus.
Not so JB, the MeToo movement has made it a preferred position of many. Charlie Chaplin made a good effort of masking it as well, a speachless effort.
How many?
That portrait of Chow is decidedly creepy bet his eyes follow you round the room, or your wife’s drilled a couple of peep holes in it.
As for posties ours isn’t too bad (swears like a trooper on the odd occasion) it’s the parcel delivery that turns up when you least expect it.
He keeps me on my toes.
Well, I have to say your office artwork sounds terrific JTI but “12 cents an hour” less so. 🤐
Your interest in the gangster world must stay with you outside of the writing process so I’m wondering if you feel the subject matter changes you on a personal level & when the last word is written do you not only feel a sense of achievement but a lifting of a weight off your shoulders?
If this is too inappropriate to ask, I do understand. Just interested mate. These criminals have carried out such ghastly crimes that even the benign news coverage makes me look away, but I’d wager you’ve seen it all, due to your intensive accumulated research for your books.
It was probably yours, Jack but there was a top line in Tough Nut/Dennis Allen, when the villain, covered in blood, wielding a chainsaw, declares “matter of fact, I got it now!” High humour, probably black.
And I’m not sure I’d be stating that a living criminal dressed like a ”racetrack pimp”. Those sartorial types can be pretty sensitive.
A vague memory tells me Laurie Coy wrote that reenactment for Dennis Allen. A little OTT possibly but with Allen, nothing could be regarded as egregious.
Great witty read as always, Mr. Insider and you are indeed a classy Wordsmith, unlike my humble self who whittled a living mainly in the Real Estate business, like yours a dog eat dog world.
“Plagiarism” for many budding Writers possibly a temptation, would be for me. To have that natural flair for words indeed God-given.
May the Pen of Jack The Insider continue for eons to excite and entertain.
Mores the point a Winner for the Cup on Tuesday if you may Sir!
Forget the winner of the cup Henry, I want to know what colour suit Geoff Edelsten will be wearing and if Gabi rocks up, what she won’t be wearing (for purely aesthetic reasons, Bella!!)
“Groan” Milton old Geoff looks like death warmed up no colour in his cheeks. As for Gabi my focus also is on her mmmm. Cheers
There you go Milton, it’s high times for you tomorrow hey?
It appears she has gone back to her man Geoff though, must be his natural head of hair & magnificent manly physique. 💰
The ladies love a man who’ll make the effort to match the colour of his hair to that of his suit!