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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

  • Milton says:

    Our future King has been going on about the environment for many years but that didn’t gel with the populist, trendy mob who need to check with groupthink before they arrive at their coincidental consensus, Most of these sad, lost, stupid and lonely sheep find solace, family, meaning and conviction in the Green, Climate Change movement, or fad.
    It is essentially racist (or imperialist, or fascist) in not wanting India, China, Brazil and other emerging nations to raise their impoverished, and their life expectancy, and their economies to pose a threat to the existing hegemony. The paradox, or is it irony, or is it by design (don’t know, not sure, but will have to ask Jean Baptiste as he is a well-known ineffectual), but this fear factor (if as some say we have 20 yrs left and other doomsday scenarios) is precisely what the industrialist, money grabbing capitalist, green, renewable, recyclable, Gore type turds want. It sells. And the predictable patsies, led from on high (which they don’t understand) come on song and sell the wares that people who’ve got nothing to live for, or are doomed to die, purchase. There will be books written about this collective neurosis, or is it psychosis, 100 years from now. I won’t be around to read them but I’m still capable of appreciating their collective, and hopefully benign, mirth.

    • Milton says:

      Top post, Milt. A pity there isn’t a “Likes” button as you’d go through the roof! And did you really mean to call dear Jean an ineffectual, coz that’s really mean. No doubt he will comment in kind as he usually does.
      Anywho, love your work.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Your Nov 8, 2018 @ 1.33AM offering is a very fair comment Milton.

      The “fad” you refer to is obviously the new world religion. Those “lonely sheep” you mention (and there’s quite a few on here as you well know) are filling the void Christianity created for itself. Whilst Christian theology has the eternal fires of “hell” as punishment for unrepentant sinners, the AGW fanatics/worshipers believe C02 will fry them in a couple of decades if they don’t dutifully pay their tithes (currently $100 billion pa.) to the high priests at the IPCC.

      A gullible mob of “predictable patsies” indeed Milton.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      https://www.methanelevels.org/

      turkey. And I don’t mean to be unkind to actual turkeys.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        I say JB, if you’re concerned about the message in your link (if in fact there is one) on that big page of criss-cross squares with the blob of blue on it, the obvious answer is to eat less turkeys.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      You are sounding ever more hysterical Milton. Trying to justify your idiocy as a long term AGW denier?

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y209xSRSLjE

    • Razor says:

      Brilliant insight Milton!

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Mr. Insider you have us in stitches with your Twitter pics/captions of ScoMo in QLD on his “Blue Blunder Bus Tour’ – the latest ripping into a big Pie and wearing a “Beefys” cap. He has gone on like a tool here in QLD but we don’t mind a bit of theatre here. I bet he never went into Katter Kountry! Cheers

  • BASSMAN says:

    Razor says:
    NOVEMBER 5, 2018 AT 11:03 PM…having trouble with Apple posts eh? I stay as far far away as I can from ANY Apple products. Apple products are only good at talking to themselves! Also U have to sign in to everything and anything to do the simplest of tasks. And don’t start me on iTunes! The biggest con ever invented.

  • Dismayed says:

    Frydenberg claims homes will be worthless if Neg. Gearing changed. He obviously has not read his own departments report on it. Furthermore what a disgraceful fear campaign to make such an absolutely false and ridiculous claim. then again he was Hockey’s assistant treasurer. also saw the previous treasurer I am sure he had a hat with corks hanging off it on his head making just as dishonest claims about debt and deficit in QLD today. I hope the Liberal party are paying for that bus and the flights he is taking, the Australian taxpayers should not be funding his election campaign. At least Gillard announced the date in advance. Credlin must be driving the bus and writing the lines again, what was the pork barrel express bus now is now the porky pie bus. disgraceful government supported by disgracefully dishonest people. No surprises.

  • Milton says:

    Stay out of the water you mob, regardless if you lean left of right. Shark’s don’t discriminate!

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Girls blouse. You should also not venture onto public roads or footpaths, use electrical items or climb step ladders. Oh and don’t go outside, there be deadly bees and snakes.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        I see you’re still dragging your knuckles JB, with that “girls blouse” reference. You’re obviously unaware its long become a weak, worn out feminine slur.

        Seems you may have been missing out on your alpha-impact tabs lately me old mate?

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Bollocks, you cissy girly man. It is still a robust eminently appropriate descriptor for the likes of AGW deniers. Confronted with reality you lift your skirts and run.

  • Milton says:

    As Bill Leak has been brought to mind, not only is he our best cartoonist, nonpareil, but also one of our most underrated, or at least unacknowledged, painters in the portrait genre. Don’t know if he ventured seriously beyond that in the paint dept. but he was also on par, and for mine better, in the cogent/coherent stuff, when putting pen to words, than those regarded as our best on the scene today and long before that. And if that wasn’t enough intelligence and skill to be bestowed upon one man, then listen to him on Fidler and Tough Nuts and the bloke is a natural born story teller, or raconteur. Seriously, laugh out loud funny. I love a good joke and yarn, as do most, but few make me lol.
    As for Chow, as an observer, it would fair to say that age did not mellow him. And perhaps he was no reader of Dylan Thomas.
    Geez I miss the bloke and I never met him, so he would have left a gaping hole for those close.

  • jack says:

    24 years since I lived in Melbourne, perhaps my memory is not what it was, but I don’t recall home invasions or carjackings being a regular event.

    i do remember that by the time I left breaking and entering domestic homes and stealing cash jewellery and appliances had been pretty much decriminalised, and that was the same in Sydney.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    4.30pm QLD time, Mr. Insider and looks safe to say that the Democrats are close to winning the House and the Republicans the Senate.
    All up not a bad result for POTUS Trump given his outspokenness. In POTUS Obama’s 1st Mid Term he was hammered but came back to win the Presidency in 2014. Trump hasn’t taken anywhere near the hit he did or most 1st Term Presidents looking down through History.
    Congratulations to the Democrats but basically Leaderless, they face an uphill battle going into 2020 imho.
    https://tinyurl.com/yafb5bdq

  • Milton says:

    I believe that Latham still has a lot more to offer this country and what better place to begin than NSW.
    On the US mid-terms, as I’m not sure how the place works, what impact will holding the senate and losing control of the house have? Will the democrats be able to block proposals etc? And as I see the GOP made gains in the senate, how does that reflect on Trump’s performance?
    It also seems to me that we in oz have a leader of the opposition, and alternative PM on the hustings, dud that Birdcage Bill is, but the US do not have a prospective alternative to Trump in the limelight.
    Give me a monarchy (not Lewinsky) anyday! (see what I did there Jean; that was on purpose, even though I’m not as araldite as you and your War and Peace bullshit!!!) mweahaahah

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      I respect your preference for a monarchy Milton, it is indeed the most appropriate system for completely emotionally dependent, mindless unquestioning forelock tugging easily led flag waving little twerps.

  • Milton says:

    I believe that Latham still has a lot more to offer this country and what better place to begin than NSW.
    On the US mid-terms, as I’m not sure how the place works, what impact will holding the senate and losing control of the house have? Will the democrats be able to block proposals etc? And as I see the GOP made gains in the senate, how does that reflect on Trump’s performance?
    It also seems to me that we in oz have a leader of the opposition, and alternative PM on the hustings, dud that Birdcage Bill is, but the US do not have a prospective alternative to Trump in the limelight.
    Give me a monarchy (not Lewinsky) anyday! (see what I did there Jean, that was on purpose, even though I’m not as araldite as you and your War and Peace bull!!!)

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