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Writers, we’re a horrendously boring bunch

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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.

This article was published in The Australian 2 November 2018.

220 Comments

  • Trivalve says:

    Latham. One Nation.

    Popcorn. Big bag.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    POTUS Trump has chosen veteran 70yo Republican lawyer Arthur B Culvahouse Jr, Mr. Insider, to move into America’s elaborate Georgian-style embassy in Canberra for the remaining two years of Trump’s 1st Term. Bravo, I say!
    https://tinyurl.com/y7lab9xy

    • Razor says:

      There’s a problem and shooting the messenger doesn’t help. I would have thought a Labor government would have been philosophically best placed to deal with the underlying issues but instead they’ve got caught up in the usual law & order auction.

    • Lou oTOD says:

      I agree Chief Judge Peter Kidd is an absolute tosser. His defense of court sentencing has to be kidding.

      • The Outsider says:

        Razor and Lou,

        I’m pretty sure that you two are among those who think that it’s futile to concentrate on reducing C02 emissions in Australia because Australia produces around 1% of the world’s emissions. However, you’re proposing that Victorian lawmakers should concentrate on reducing Sudanese crime, when the Sudanese are responsible for around the same proportion of Victorian crime.

        They same there’s one born every minute, but let’s not make it so obvious next time, chaps. In other words, play the issue, not the ideology.

  • JackSprat says:

    Serious question.
    We get quoted that the Sudanese population represent .1% of the population and 1% of the crimes in Vic and that Vic crime is at an all time low.
    1. What is the Sudanese representation in the crimes in the suburbs and neighboring suburbs where they live.?
    2. What is the increase in crime in these suburbs – if any ie how does it compare with the overall Vic situation?
    2. Given the reluctance (and often the inability because of lack of evidence) of police to arrest said people, how does this distort the statistics if at all ie are the figures quoted for crimes where there have been successful prosecution leaving a number that are grouped in unsolved crimes?

    Could be a reason why there is a difference between the anecdotal evidence and the official statistics.
    I just do not know and have no idea as to where to start.

    • Dismayed says:

      Start by looking in the mirror and ask yourself “Why am I racist? Why I am I so scared of anything different to me? how have i become so insular in my views? ” That should keep you going for a couple of decades.

    • Razor says:

      .1% of the population and 1% of the crime is the first worry. Overall crime is down but violent crime, including sexual assault is trending up. There is without doubt a Sudanese crime problem amongst their youth in Melbourne. As with all youth crime lack of education, job opportunities and social disenfranchisement lay at the heart of the problem.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Serious answer.
      Why do you ask?

      • JackSprat says:

        Because I lived through the Ryan period in NSW when the supposed crime rate in Chatswood was worse than some Western Suburbs where, at the time, Vietnamese crime was rife.
        Later evidence showed that the statistics had been cooked.
        I want to know if the statistics in Vic have been manipulated to prove a point – just what I would expect from any political party trying to prove a point.
        In other words, are we being conned.
        As to what to do about the problem, I have no idea.
        I guess I am tired of the bull-dust that we get fed on a daily basis from all sides.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes, the reports of marauding gangs of youths of African appearance throughout the Melbourne suburbs appears to be a beat up, whichever way you cut it. Even the local plods seem to be unsure, referring to the perps as simply nothing more than a bunch of “networked criminal offenders”.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Trivalve asks: (from previous topic, on “gourmet hugs”)
    Nov 5 2018 10.26am

    “Wot?”

    This excerpt from Nov 2 ‘The Weekend Australian Magazine’ may assist TV. You been traipsing through the undergrowth yourself lately mate?

    “Change and progress chased us into these woods. One hundred years of under-fathering chased us into these woods. We have run here from our work diaries and our disappointed kids. We have run from our quiet wars and the wives we love and their evolutionarily superior emotional intelligence. We have run from our mobile phones and our beers and our dartboards and our jokes about frisky nuns. We have run from ourselves and into ourselves. Into the past. Into the present. Into the woods.”

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    The 158th running of the Melbourne Cup today, Mr. Insider best of luck to those having a wager.
    https://tinyurl.com/y8pyqdjv

  • Razor says:

    Could anyone on the blog tell me if you are posting a comment from an I Pro or other apple device. If so are you having difficulties with the site. Comments coming up as X and then when you move to the next page the numbers appear from 3 updates ago!

    Those on the left don’t seem to be having any problems! Not blaming you JTI but something’s not right!

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Over to you commenters. I can’t help much from this end but know Razor has been having some problems.

      • John O'Hagan says:

        I’ve been having the same or similar issues on and off since the blog format changed a few months back. Comments sometimes appear out of temporal order, and the first page of comments takes a day or two longer to update than subsequent pages, and therefore shows a smaller total comments number. This results in some comments being invisible for a time — in limbo between the first and second pages — which may or may not explain the out-of-order issue. Sometimes it helps to refresh or cache-clear or change browsers or devices, other times it doesn’t. Beats me.

        So Razor, don’t worry, George Soros hasn’t paid off JTI out of the profits from his moon-landing studio in the basement of his pizza shop. “Those on the left” are having the same issues, we just have more important stuff to worry about.

        • Razor says:

          You’ve got your conspiracy theorists wrong. JB is the fake moon landing man. A tad closer politically to you than me I’d suggest!

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Conspiracy fact, not theory Razor. Anyone who cant work out why humans cannot even get close to landing on the moon is just plain ignorant. Anyone who believes that 1969 nonsense is just plain stupid.
            And yes God is running interference on your postings. I told Him I am all for free speech but He said “FFS there has to be limits.”

      • Penny says:

        Have no problem whatsoever with my iPad (s), Mac or my PC.

        • Penny says:

          Maybe it’s because I live overseas that I have no problem…..you lot (especially those on the left) are probably being monitored by “the authorities” as we speak.

      • Lou oTOD says:

        Yeah Jack and Razor, I use an iPad mosly and for weeks the comments have been all over the place. I took it to be at your end Jack as the new comments have been sporadic and slow, but not so on the laptop whenever I get to it which means going in to the office I’d rather stay out of.

        I expected an avalanche of wisdom after Australia’s resounding collapse n the cricket, and some substantial Trumpeting ahead of the mid-terms tomorrow. Oh well, there’s always SBS as a desperate go to.

    • Tracy says:

      iPad Pro here Razor, I check the blog either late in the evening or early next morning as there don’t seem to be any updates for me in between those times.
      On posting a comment the same as you for previous comment numbers.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Don’t know about Apple Razor but with Windows you have to do “Cntrl F5” for every page to reset the Cache. The astute JackSprat put us on to that one.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Providence Razor. Divine intervention. I tried to intercede on your behalf with the Big Fella in the sky but He just said “Nah bugger ‘im and bugger Adani too.”

      True! I did my best.

    • JackSprat says:

      Browsing the blog on an IPad is fraught with difficulties. One rarely gets an up to date version of the blog. Refresh does not work.
      I very rarely post from the IPad but I have th feeling that posts do disappear.
      On a Windows PC, one has to hit CTRL F5 to get an up to date version.

    • Boadicea says:

      I find the blog unpredictable Razor and JTI.
      If it doesn’t seem to have updated for ages i try another browser and switch to my laptop (Windows 10) from my smartphone – which is Android.
      That sometimes does the trick.
      I don’t use my ipad anymore.
      But I agree, there is something going on that wasn’t there before. Can’t pinpoint it.

    • Bella says:

      Razor sorry to know you’re having trouble posting. If it helps, when I’m on the move I use my Samsung 8 tablet & very often don’t get updated comments on that device for up to 24 hours yet on my home PC I can Control/F5 (thanks JS) and it’s pretty much immediate. On a device or the PC the refresh loop on the blog hasn’t worked for some time but you can turn your IPro off/on & that can also refresh posts.
      I’ve been told by a tech-head that ‘limited available storage space’ on a hand-held device filled with documents, apps, photos & constant updates can be a factor too. Best of luck…🤔
      It’s too funny that you think “those on the left” don’t have problems when ‘we’ are still stuck with the dodgy government you voted for!! ☹

    • Trivalve says:

      I can’t tell you or I’d have to kill you

  • Boadicea says:

    Dear Mr Branson,
    I really love Virgin Airlines.
    I raised two children and we got through the teenage years heroically in one piece – even though it felt like a war zone at times.
    Could you please consider me for priority boarding too?
    I must admit though, that it is just as easy to sit back and relax and watch till the last in the queue has gone through the gate and then stroll on – and one would be spared black looks from all the wannabees.
    Love
    Boa

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      ……………… – and one would be spared all the black looks from all the wannabees.”
      I cant say I take any notice of the faces of my fellow passengers on aircraft Boadicea. And I couldn’t care less but you notice wannabees? What do these wannabees wannabee? Do they wannabee a wazzock too?
      “Do you wannabee a wazzock too?” How about that for lyrics? Should be perfect for this tune. I’m a genius.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ouBi1v5Lw8

    • Bella says:

      I don’t think anyone would see a problem with veterans boarding first however from what I’ve read, not many of them seem to want to put themselves in that position. At the end of the day this government aren’t concerned with addressing all their psychological problems after deployment so this empty gesture certainly isn’t going to fix them.
      I don’t get why you would get ‘black looks’ when boarding Boa? 😊

  • BASSMAN says:

    Government’s hate the battlers. Ciggies, beer, and now the cricket. Cricket is more popular than religion in this country and now you have to pay to watch our heroes. The govt should step in. Cricket is on the wane and with only one third of the population with pay TV ,is anyone thinking of kids, the games future? Cricket already has to compete with a million other options kids have to choose from. This will backfire on the money hungry cricket board. I can remember as a kid when even the Sheffield Shield was televised. FFsake has anybody thought this through?

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      We have ScoMo up here in QLD for 4 days with his Blue Election Bus and of course, he started off in the “battlers” seat of the Gold Coast held comfortably by Steven Ciobo. Cheers

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Just training couch potatoes BASS, out of this may come good. Some kid somewhere might just read a book instead.

    • Dismayed says:

      CA revenues off the charts through broadcasting rights and yet CA still receive $millions in taxpayer funding. This was always going to end in tears. The worst thing is tennis and freakin golf are still free to air if anything should be pay per view it is those two boring events.

    • Mack the Knife says:

      Agree Bassman, it’s going the way of a lot of other sports, corporate greed has taken over. My interest in rugby, rugby league and cricket is on the decline, bigtime.

    • JackSprat says:

      Could not agree more Bassy.
      There is another reason why it will die. With the current state of affairs, it is not worth watching.

    • Lou oTOD says:

      They did many people a favour Bassy. I am tempted to cancel my Foxtel sub so I dont get sucked in to thinking something might change and watch it. I am not surprised the shite hit the fan when people realised there was no broadcast, but mind you it was announced many months ago. You would have been asleep to not notice it, but being asleep is now a good way to deal with.

      • BASSMAN says:

        Lao Tzu …I cancelled my Foxtel last week until the 1st footy game next year…the bastards still have the hide to charge me a fee until the footy season starts even though i am not using it. I will probably give up watching footy when Bennett moves to coach Souths….what horror of Horrors!!

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Don’t think you’ve thought it through BASSY.

      If, as you say, “cricket is more popular than religion” but “cricket is on the wane”, why should “the govt step in” when there are, as you say, “a million other options kids have to choose from”?c

    • Bella says:

      Last season’s very last North Queensland Cowboys round, featuring Thurston’s final game EVER was also not free-to-air Bassy, leaving those without Foxtel in shock.
      Money wins over people everytime nowadays..☹

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