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My freelance writing can now be found at mikeatkinson.wordpress.com.
Recently: VV Brown, Alabama 3, Just Jack, Phantom Band, Frankmusik, Twilight Sad, Slaid Cleaves, Alesha Dixon, Bellowhead, The Unthanks, Dizzee Rascal.
On Thursday September 17th, I danced on the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square.
Click here to watch, and here to listen. Monday, November 01, 2004
Lit crit bitch sesh.
For all my occasional cheap sneers at the dull, predictable tastes of the ten-CD-a-year crowd (Keane and Snow Patrol? Oh, the horror! I must reconsider our friendship immediately!) there is an instant, crushing comeback: when it comes to books, I am every bit as safe and slack. Evidence for the prosecution: my holiday reading this year consisted of Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code and last year's Booker Prize winner, DBC Pierre's Vernon God Little - two choices which make Keane and Snow Patrol look positively underground. Because basically, if it's not MASSIVE, then it simply falls under my radar.
All of which helps to explain why I'm now reading this year's Booker Prize winner, Alan Hollinghurst's The Line Of Beauty, despite finding his last two novels really pretty bloody irritating. We have an altogether strange relationship, Hollinghurst and I. Although he frequently drives me to distraction, I somehow feel compelled to read him, and I'm not sure I altogether understand why. This was particularly the case with his previous novel, The Spell, which juxtaposed drug-f***ed urban scene-queenery with gracious gay living in the shires in a manner which sometimes had me openly hurling abuse at the page, and at its maddeningly pathetic central four characters. And yet, and yet: was a large part of my irritation not a reflex reaction against an uncomfortably sharp recognition of realities which the book all too accurately depicted? And if I hated it so much, then why did so many of its scenes continue to resonate within me for years afterwards? Actually, my main bone of contention with Hollinghurst is probably much simpler: it's that damned writing style. It's dry, bloodless, and emotionally disengaged; but most annoyingly of all, it's self-consciously "literary" in such a mimsy, precious way. For example, when one of the characters in The Spell sprays himself with aftershave, Hollinghurst has him "stepping into the costly mist", if you please. Jeez Louise, it's only a bit of pong! This description has since entered our private repertoire of stock catchphrases, deployed whenever one of us catches the other brandishing a bottle of Eau Savage/Burberry Weekend in the bathroom (delete as appropriate). "He stepped into the costly mist." Titter, titter. Sets us off, every time. Although I am only on the third chapter of The Line Of Beauty (and you should hear the way K scornfully pronounces that title alone) I have already started a small collection of similarly toe-curling phrases - which I delight in reading out loud, just to watch him squirm and howl in that peculiarly satisfying way of his. Here's what I've amassed so far. For maximum effect, these should be read out loud, in a voice pitched somewhere between Brian Sewell and Hyacinth Bucket.
As you probably know by now, it's being sarky little madams that keeps us going.
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