Usually, to round off
a blogging year, I do a post about my creative exploits in the past twelve
months but, to be honest, I didn’t feel like doing one in 2020. It was a bad year for all of us, though not
without individual rays of sunshine and as a writer, I found it stifled me for
a while. The various lockdowns also meant all Cons and gatherings I would normally
attend didn’t happen and I really did miss them and my writing family (we Zoomed but it wasn't the same).
The Early Works... |
So instead, I thought
I’d look back at some of my earliest creative endeavours (I was homaging Steve Austin
and Star Wars back when I was 8 and 9) and here are the first four ‘novels’ I
wrote (though I doubt they'd even class as
novellas now). My Dad, star that he is, dutifully read them all and gave me feedback - I’m sure he
was over the moon when I started writing horror, a genre he doesn’t get on
with, so he could stop being my first reader.
With their inspirations barely hidden, some wonderful cover designs (I loved Letraset!) and
all bound with string, I present the ‘Early Novels of Mark West’.
Shark! (1981)
An odd combination of Jaws (naturally) and comics stories from the likes of Bullet, Crunch and Action, this features Mark West, a government salvage expert with a shark phobia whose latest job is, naturally enough, in shark infested waters.
Hadley Hall
Comprehensive (1982)
A huge fan of the Robert Leeson Grange Hill novelisations, I decided to write my own, putting me and my friends into a series of adventures that were very much based in Rothwell and at Montsaye, the comprehensive I was attending at the time. The cover is taken from a photo-story I did in 1981 (and wrote about here), featuring my Dad, me and my friend Geoff.
The Space Mercenary
(1983)
It’s my take on Star Wars.
An odd combination of Jaws (naturally) and comics stories from the likes of Bullet, Crunch and Action, this features Mark West, a government salvage expert with a shark phobia whose latest job is, naturally enough, in shark infested waters.
A huge fan of the Robert Leeson Grange Hill novelisations, I decided to write my own, putting me and my friends into a series of adventures that were very much based in Rothwell and at Montsaye, the comprehensive I was attending at the time. The cover is taken from a photo-story I did in 1981 (and wrote about here), featuring my Dad, me and my friend Geoff.
It’s my take on Star Wars.
A tale of bounty hunters (lifted from The Mantracker in Crunch comic and The Fall Guy himself) tracking down a famous model, this was directly inspired by the first The A-Team novelisation by Charles Heath, which I loved (and still do).
* * *
In the year itself, I had one story published, a reprint of What We Do Sometimes, Without Thinking, which appeared in STORIES OF HOPE AND WONDER, a NewCon Press anthology Ian Whates put together to raise funds for NHS frontline staff (and which has contributed over £2k so far). I wrote about it here and you can buy the e-anthology here.
So an odd year then but, whatever 2021 decides to throw at us, I hope you and yours stay safe and healthy.
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