Conjuring up the Wizard of Notts who is speaking with me in his author persona - so let's give a great round of applause for Mark Barry, novelist extraordinaire!
What do you think makes a good story?
What do you think makes a good story?
I think you have to be a reader and a listener, and you have
to love stories. Listening to them, overhearing them on the bus, watching them
transpire in your life. Characters, pace, elements of surprise, digressions, and
a memorable, heart rending climax are just the technical elements I can think
of, but a story, a great story, is a gestalt:
always greater than the sum of its parts.
What compelled you to
write about violence in sports?
I know quite a few football hooligans, including the stars
of Ultra Violence and Violent Disorder, and while other clubs
have had books written about them, it was suggested to me that it was about
time Notts County had one. The club had some very naughty boys following them
at one point, but because the fans of the club are outnumbered five to one by
Nottingham Forest, who have also been more successful on the pitch, the stories
never got out. Any ethnic minority will tell you that their achievements are
always suppressed, and Notts, apparently, are no different. Also, the two books
represent all the small clubs who have thirty or so hooligans that never got
any publicity because of the antics of the Legacy clubs such as Chelsea or
Stoke City, who had gangs of a thousand hooligans. I thought it would be a
different take on the subject, which despite a massive Political and Police
crackdown, is still a feature of British football matches.
Which book was more
difficult to write, Ultra Violence or its sequel, Violent Disorder? Be specific.
The second book without doubt. Ultra Violence took me eighteen days to write. It’s rough, raw and ready, and just flew out
of me. I had been thinking of it for a couple of years, and so I knew what I
was going to write. The two massive fight sequences - at Hartlepool and at home
to Luton - are legendary at Notts, and they wrote themselves.
The sequel is much more personal to two of the characters in
Ultra Violence, the crazy Bully
brothers. It also contains a huge chapter about a very recent match versus
Coventry, and the climax reads more like a fiction novel than a traditional “hooliporn”
novel like Ultra Violence. It also
took me nearly six months to write which for me, is like Joseph Heller’s third
novel or Terence Malick’s latest film.
How did you come up
with the title?
Violent Disorder
is one of the most common offences for football hooligans on the British
Statute Books. It’s also neatly connected with Ultra Violence. I was going to call it Bully Brothers, but one of
the eponymous characters has done really well for himself in the interim and it
wouldn’t have been fair, even though that title is a great book waiting to
happen.
How did you come up
with the unique cover? And speaking of
covers, the second edition of Ultra Violence has a similar unique design. Was there a method to your madness?
The two covers, created by Dawn at Dark Dawn Creations, were
based on a design by me, taken from a photo of us all in Tenerife in January
2006. Sixty of us went over there for the character named Haxford’s fiftieth
birthday party. It’s a great photo, and as there are only ever going to be two
books on this topic, I thought a little of the old Yin/Yang might go down well,
so we halved the photo and played around with it. I quite like the concept.
What was your
favorite chapter to write, and why?
I like the Peterborough chapter. Why? It’s completely
bonkers. It has to be read to be believed. The last four pages took ages to
write. I also like the Brentford chapter, which is quite well written, written
with some experimental techniques I’ve been trying to use for a while, and the
one where HobNob goes wandering with his son around an area of Nottingham
called Hockley.
There are multiple
themes running through the two books. Is
there one particular cause you champion above all else?
Both books deal with the death of lower league football, the
rise of Sky TV and the “plastic” fan. They also talk about the over-aged
football hooligan who cannot let it go despite the fact they all should know
better. In Ultra Violence, the Luton
chapters and the Epilogue, where the gang prepare for one last fight, similar
to the one at the end of Peckinpah’s great film, The Wild Bunch, pass muster with any I’ve written before or since.
I have half another book on my PC called
The Last Ride of the Should Know
Better Club, about a coachload of over-aged yobs who follow Notts home and
away, and I may do something with that next year. Great title, huh!
Which character would
you choose to promote the book?
Mini-Beefy, HobNob’s son. He’s the most sensible one of the
three of them, and he does Media Studies at A’Level.
With two books in the
series, will there be a third?
No. I’ve run out of stories on this subject, and I’ve said
what I have to say. Time to move onto other things.
Would you be willing
to share a brief excerpt?
In the aftermath of the last match of the season, mobile
phone calls are received which chart the battles flaring all over Nottingham.
The narrator expressed surprise at what he hears…
Renfield turned to Bull.
You know Jimbo?
I do.
He’s just been at it.
He’s sixty? He was sixty at Bournemouth. They had a party
for him.
I know. Good, innit?
I overheard this conversation.
Sixty.
To this day, I would not have believed that sixty year olds
fought at football matches, but HobNob isn’t far off, only a decade and a bit
away, and I looked at him, in his black shirt and full head of chestnut brown
hair, trotting across the canal bridge, a man half his age. The sixty of my
youth isn’t the sixty of this generation, the NHS performing miracles in
keeping people alive. No more war, healthy eating, and health conscious wives
with plenty of culinary ideas other than fish and chips. The end of cigarettes,
changing genetic profiles, society’s veneration of everything young and the
incredible sense of the pointlessness of the modern world.
Sixty.
The more you looked at the issue of aged football hooligans,
there was a certain amount of logic in it.
It was just a number.
One after fifty nine and one before sixty one.
Some Sikh geezer ran the London Marathon, and he was 102. I
know an eighty year old who runs ten kilometres a day.
Thirty years ago, sixty meant you were virtually dead, your
shifts in a rice pudding factory a millstone around your neck. Weekends spent
imprisoned in an armchair, your armchair, a seat to be avoided by everyone for
more reasons than one; exhausted, watching a dead television with dead
celebrities, dead themes, dead ideas, dead adverts, dead chat and dead game
shows, drinking Double Diamond straight from the can and eating fish and chips
(extinct fish, potatoes saturated in dead fat) straight from the racing pages
of The Sun. Missus slaving, cooking and cleaning, transfixed by a reverie of
hour-long Marigold fantasies involving fucking the smiling next door neighbour
or sparkly shirted pub singers and/or cool, rum-throated Rastafarians with
throbbing purple c***s, and eventually, Mr Sixty would nurture a streaky
combover and his nostril gaps would swell like a pike’s gills, and his cheesy
teeth would loosen: Tarnished eyes amidst sunken sockets. A scent sticking to him, a diaphanous presence
the consistency of muslin in his faggy armchair on his faggy carpet with his faggy
TV, and by the time he was sixty five and retired, he would be six feet under
after a massive coronary and his missus of thirty years, before her month of
grief was over, would be enjoying her next door neighbour’s salty c**k, her
fantasies realised because her rice pudding husband was dead at sixty, she
fancied her neighbour something rotten, and luckily for her, those feelings
were reciprocated.
Today, the sixty-year-old was off his armchair.
Having a good runabout in Nottingham Town Centre with his
mates, his Hackett Cap and blouson, his hundred quid jeans, his Gazelles.
Keeping fit, keeping active.
A healthy regime for the modern age.
Gym in the week.
10k on the treadmill.
Five-a-side with the lads.
Salads and plenty of extra virgin olive oil.
No cigarettes.
No drinking at lunchtime.
No drinking in the week.
Kick fuck out of some know-nothing Cov c**t on a Saturday
afternoon with the chaps.
No more armchairs any more.
All the heroes are on the streets.
Purchase Links:
Purchase Links:
Amazon US
http://www.amazon.com/Violent-Disorder-ebook/dp/B00E8NVBNK/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1375701983&sr=8-1&keywords=violent+disorder+by+mark+barry
Amazon UK
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Violent-Disorder-ebook/dp/B00E8NVBNK/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1375702189&sr=1-1&keywords=violent+disorder
Fabulous interview with Mark Barry. And that excerpt ... bloody brilliant writing. Kudos you you, Mr Barry n x
ReplyDelete:-) Thank you, Ngaire! Much appreciated...Always enjoy a chat with Mary Ann!! Look forward to the spotlight tomorrow!! :-) Mxx
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