Menz Insana
by Christopher Fowler; John Bolton and Tom Orzechowski
DC/Vertigo
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Menz Insana
by Christopher Fowler; John Bolton and Tom Orzechowski
DC/Vertigo
Authors Support Authors
When no one else can be relied on, other writers will be there.
Being an author is a *ride* my friends. I have done signings where there are lines of people. And some where three people came, one of which was my partner and one my best friend. I’ve been flown places and feted... And I’ve been ignored by the people who invited me (who seemed shocked and annoyed at my very presence). I’ve had readers tell me I changed their lives. I’ve had readers tell me a toddler with a dictionary could do better.
But you know what has never waivered—at least in my experience? Other authors are almost unfailingly supportive. Of course there are exceptions, I’m sure. But I’ve been cared for by writers all my career; they are the support system, they are the ones who lift all the boats. Authors know that this is a mad, precarious, bizarre path with few safe havens. They will be there for you.
In a brief biographical sketch, the crime writer Christopher Fowler, who has died aged 69, claimed he had achieved several of his “pathetic schoolboy fantasies”: releasing an “appalling” Christmas pop single; working as a male model; posing as the villain in a Batman graphic novel; running a Soho night club; appearing in The Pan Book of Horror series; and standing in for James Bond. Rather than examples of Fowler’s wicked sense of humour, all these claims were true. Time Out, meanwhile, called him “an award-winning novelist who would make a good serial killer”.
He was best known for his Bryant & May thrillers, featuring the elderly, venerable detectives Arthur Bryant and John May, who head up the Peculiar Crimes Unit, a department of the London police set up during the second world war to investigate cases that might cause a national scandal or public unrest. The pair had made appearances in some of Fowler’s early novels – Rune (1990), Darkest Day (1993) and Soho Black (1998) – before breaking out into their own long-running series, starting with Full Dark House in 2003.
Bryant, an irascible technophobe, and May, more accepting of the ways of modern life, have been partners for more than 60 years, having first teamed up in 1940 when they were 23 and 19 respectively. The first novel begins with the death by explosion of Bryant; while May investigates, he discovers connections with the pair’s very first case, the killing of a dancer during the blitz, which is told in flashback.
The Gothic air and clashing personalities continued into sequels, each intended to explore a different sub-genre of crime fiction, described by Fowler as “all the devices of classic murder mysteries, including disguised identities, locked room puzzles, surprise ending and nick-of-time rescues”.
The intended one-off novel became six books, then 12 and eventually 20, including two collections of short stories. Central to the series – and many of his other works – was Fowler’s love of London. He found the city endlessly fascinating and delighted in discovering its odder corners and the strangeness of its inhabitants, past and present. “The most bizarre facts in this book are the truest,” he noted in the acknowledgments of The Water Room, the second in the series, published in 2004.
Fowler began writing books alongside a career in the film industry, having co-founded the film promotion agency the Creative Partnership while in his 20s. This gave him the freedom to write what he liked, which made him a publisher’s nightmare: the unclassifiable author. After producing two novels that failed to launch and publishing two humorous titles, How to Impersonate Famous People (1984) and The Ultimate Party Book (1985), Fowler sold two collections of horror stories – City Jitters (1986) and More City Jitters (1988) – to the publisher of his near-neighbour, the novelist and playwright Clive Barker.
He followed this with Roofworld (1988), an urban fantasy novel about battling gangs and secret occult societies who use zipwires and bungee cords to travel above the city – inspired by the interconnected rooftops of London’s densely packed streets and his knowledge of how burglars would break into buildings through the top floor.
Roofworld established some of Fowler’s common themes – warfare between classes, battling evil corporations, and secret worlds existing within touching distance of unsuspecting Londoners – and introduced recurring characters, including DS Janice Longbright, who later served in the Peculiar Crimes Unit.
The real myths and mysteries of London held more interest to him than the supernatural horror of his earlier novels, although that did not stop him writing disturbing and blackly humorous takes on old themes: Rune’s subliminal messages echo MR James’ Casting the Runes; in Red Bride (1992) an ordinary man is seduced by a succubus; and in Spanky (1994) the hero engages in a Faustian pact with a demon.
The family at the heart of Psychoville (1995) are driven out of the suburbs by its change-resistant middle-class community; Disturbia (1996) has its hero uncover the machinations of a secret society; Hell Train (2011) is a homage to Hammer Films; Nyctophobia (2014) is a haunted house story; Little Boy Found (2017, as LK Fox) a psychological thriller; and Hot Water (2022) a murder mystery.
Fowler’s influences included Mervyn Peake’s Gormenghast trilogy (which he called “powerful, black and funny”), John Dickson Carr’s The Hollow Man (“the ultimate in sleight-of-hand”) and JG Ballard (“his ‘five minutes into the future’ books were startling in their prescience”), the latter strongly influencing The Sand Men (2015).
His short story Left Hand Drive was filmed in 1993, and The Master Builder was made into the TV movie Through the Eyes of a Killer (1992), with Tippi Hedren. He won five British Fantasy awards, including for Full Dark House. Other Bryant & May novels won prizes and he was awarded the 2015 Crime Writers’ Association Dagger in the Library award for his body of work. His memoir Paperboy (2009) won the inaugural Green Carnation award.
Fowler was born in Greenwich, south-east London, the son of Lilian (nee Upton), a legal secretary, and William Fowler, a glass-blower and designer of scientific instruments with whom Fowler had a troubled relationship. He grew up reading fantasy, horror and science fiction, graduating from Superman comics to Tolkien and Ballard in his teens.
He was educated at Colfe’s grammar school in Lee before enrolling to study art at Goldsmiths College in 1972, although he left to take up work as a copywriter in various advertising agencies. At the age of 26 he set up the Creative Partnership with the producer Jim Sturgeon to market films, becoming a one-stop shop producing trailers, posters and commercials for radio and TV.
The company worked on campaigns for Bernardo Bertolucci, Peter Greenaway, Ridley Scott, Quentin Tarantino, David Cronenberg, Mike Leigh and many others, on movies ranging from Alien – they were paid £20 for the line “In space no one can hear you scream” – and The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, to GoldenEye and Reservoir Dogs.
The Creative Partnership opened an office in Beverley Hills and Fowler spent the early 80s in the US, but could find only badly paid, uncreative work. With time on his hands he began writing, finding success after returning to London. He was able to maintain a steady output, including a graphic novel (Menz Insana, 1997), a stage play (Celebrity, produced at the Phoenix, London, in 2010), and the War of the Worlds video game (2011) for Paramount.
He also wrote a 319-episode series of short essays on forgotten authors for the Independent on Sunday, partly collected as Invisible Ink (2012) and The Book of Forgotten Authors (2017). Essay 319 featured Christopher Fowler, described as “a typical example of the late 20th-century midlist author ... [whose] ability of turning his hand to most literary forms granted him the honorary title of ‘Wordslut’”.
Fowler was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer in March 2020. He worked on his 20th Bryant & May novel, London Bridge is Falling Down (2021), while undergoing chemotherapy in hospital, and the following year published Bryant & May’s Peculiar London, in which his characters explore the true life eccentricities and elusive byways of the city. His third volume of memoirs, Word Monkey (following Paperboy and Film Freak, 2013), is due out in August.
Fowler formed a civil partnership in 2007 with the TV executive Peter Chapman, and 10 years later they married. Peter survives him, along with his younger brother, Steven.
🔔 Christopher Robert Fowler, author and screenwriter, born 26 March 1953; died 2 March 2023
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Roofworld
Locus notes: "The American and British editions are considerably different—even down to the acknowledgements." Charles de Lint notes that the Ballantine edition dropped the last chapter from the book.
After 20 outings, the unconventional detective duo of Arthur Bryant and John May have solved their last case. But their creator is not willing to let them go entirely …
Christopher Fowler is picking at a healthy-looking bowl of protein and veggies. “I don’t have much appetite these days.” For the last two years he has been having cancer treatment, but remains upbeat. Lunch over, we move to the other end of his penthouse flat in London’s King’s Cross, where a floor-to-ceiling bookshelf houses a vast collection of London esoterica. Outside on the terrace, the large, shiny model of Marvel superhero the Silver Surfer that used to stand guard is gone. “He got frostbite and his fingers fell off. He couldn’t handle King’s Cross, let alone the depths of space.” A wide sweep of the skyline takes in the London Eye to the Shard, and far beyond.
This month London Bridge Is Falling Down, Fowler’s 20th Bryant & May crime novel, will be published, bringing to a close a much-loved series that started in 2003 with Full Dark House. The books feature the unconventional detective duo Arthur Bryant and John May of London’s Peculiar Crimes Unit, who solve arcane murders whose occult significance baffles more traditional detectives. Crime fiction aficionados can amuse themselves by spotting references to classics of the golden age, whose plots and twists Fowler ingeniously projects on to the era of computers and mobile phones. Everyone else can enjoy the endlessly bantering and discursive dialogue between the pair as they break all procedural rules, and the uniquely droll narrative voice with its sharp-eyed slant on modern life.
In 2003 Fowler was established as a writer predominantly of horror, with forays into black comedy and satire based around his day job in film marketing. Full Dark House was meant to be a standalone, which is why Fowler kills Bryant off in the first few pages with an explosion that destroys the PCU offices, about 60 years after his heroes first met as youngsters during the blitz. That first novel is set mostly in wartime flashback around the Palace theatre at Cambridge Circus, where a Phantom-like murderer uses air raids as a cue to run amok among the gantries.
The duo’s further adventures involve such site-specific elements as Punch and Judy shows, forgotten London rivers, Victorian boozers, the nursery rhyme “Oranges and Lemons” and, in the latest book, models of London Bridge. Fowler is clearly obsessed with the capital – was he worried the series might only appeal to those similarly inclined?
“I think everybody likes walking through London in their mind, and because it has so many literary connotations, London is already slightly blurred with fiction. I expected that I was writing very parochially for a very limited audience, and it turned out that what I was doing was the reverse – the more abstract, strange and esoteric I became, the more people liked it. I was going to finish at book six but it got a groundswell of very loyal – strangely loyal – fans.”
At this point sales also began to pick up in the US. “I’ve had a few complaints over the years – one from a Republican senator who complained it was ‘too deep English’ for him. But I’ve been lucky to have a couple of editors in New York who were absolutely brilliant. Their attitude was, don’t change a word.”
With a few exceptions – Hall of Mirrors is set in the 1960s – the detecting duo are of pensionable age. Bryant in particular crumbles away from book to book, wearing dentures and walking with a stick. Isn’t there a technical challenge with starting off with such aged characters?
“One of the curses of having an old guy is that you can only get away with having so many health scares. But it only gets tricky if you assume that fictional characters age like human beings! Why should the Simpsons age? It’s a ridiculous idea!”
May, slightly younger and much more charming, compensates for Bryant’s more abrasive style. Cross-grained, eccentric, erudite, he is steeped in London lore and apt to make bizarre connections and mental leaps that would faze anyone else. To what extent does Bryant resemble his creator?
“I am not Arthur Bryant.” At this point Fowler’s husband, Pete, a TV executive, appears in the background and mouths: “Oh yes he is!” Fowler pauses. “A little bit of me is, but I haven’t got that cantankerous … fuck off!” He jerks his thumb at Pete, laughing. “Someone who hasn’t read the last four books.”
Over the last couple of years, ill health has forced Fowler into different working practices. He worked on London Bridge Is Falling Down while receiving chemotherapy at University College Hospital. “It was great, they set me up with a desk. Yeah, yeah, just carried on with a thing in my arm. Who cares? And then I decided to bring [the series] to a definite stop. I cannot pull another Bobby Ewing!’
I ask if the cancer diagnosis had some bearing on his decision to wind things up. “It’s subconscious, but by book 18 I’d started adding details that would eventually dovetail the 20th book back to the first, completing a circle. I couldn’t even see it, that’s the weird thing. When I delivered it, my agent said: ‘I think you’ve been approaching this for a long time.’ I’d packed it with little things that were pointers back to the earliest books. Right towards the end, I didn’t quite have the last link of the story until I realised – it’s obvious. It’s a thing that happened at the start.”
It must have felt strange, to say goodbye after all these years. “People say, do your characters live with you all the time? No – they live with me when I sit down [to write]. I open the lid on the laptop, that’s the only time I think about them. Then I get really lost in that world, I have to be dragged out. The rest of the time they’re not living with me. But the characters are so clear in my head that writing the end was really emotional. I really did feel it was like losing family members, because my parents read the books and loved the characters and my parents are both gone, so …”
After a moment, he picks up again. “That’s probably why I did two volumes of memoirs in the middle of the series [Paper Boy and Film Freak], because Bryant’s memories are so churned up with my parents’ memories of London. It stirred up enough stuff to make me think I should actually do their story as well. They both lost their teenage years to the war: my mum joined the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force and my dad was a firewatcher at St Paul’s.”
London Bridge Is Falling Down is not the last we’ll hear from Bryant and May. In Bryant & May’s Peculiar London, coming out next year, characters from the series simply wander around the city having conversations about places they love. “I wanted to make it a really chatty, cheeky, irreverent, messy series of arguments about London. I delivered it thinking they’re never going to accept this, and the publishers went: ‘Oh we love it – it’s like a Bryant & May book without bodies in it!’”
Of course London has moved on inexorably since Fowler began his writing career, and co-founded his film marketing company the Creative Partnership at the age of 26. Soho is not the international film hub it once was, in the heady days when the company was working on 15 films a month, including marketing campaigns for Reservoir Dogs and Trainspotting. One of Fowler’s claims to fame from the time is mentioned in Film Freak. “Asked to provide poster straplines for Alien, I wrote several pages of them, including ‘In space no one can hear you scream’. I assume I wasn’t the only person to think of this – it’s an obvious line,” he writes.
“Someone else laid claim to it this month, I noticed,” he says now. “I love it! But we worked on it first, because it was shooting in the UK. Ridley Scott came to see us and gave us a drawing of an egg and said: ‘That’s really all I can tell you – and it’s going to be very frightening.’ We used to get paid £20 per page of copylines and that was the one they went with.”
For years he shuttled between the Cannes film festival and the Frankfurt book fair, twin poles of his existence. Though the company still exists in slimmed-down form, he retired 15 years ago. “The business model changed dramatically. Once everything went digital, America didn’t really need a London outpost. There are hardly any screening rooms left in Soho now. All these places I spent half my life in.”
The question mark over his health means that by the time the Peculiar London book comes out next July, he might, as he drily puts it, not be “available for the tour”. Given that during our interview he comes up with two new book ideas and is currently putting the finishing touches to a fantasy novel, the prognosis isn’t slowing him down. However, we finish on a melancholy note, discussing how many of his short stories over the years describe a London that has now gone. His film anecdotes, too, evoke a vanished world, one where you could take George Hamilton to Bruno’s Sandwich Bar in Soho or get the concierge at the Athenaeum Hotel to put you through to any visiting star. But Fowler’s voice is growing hoarse and it’s time to stop for a coffee.
On the way home, I peek at my copy of the final Bryant & May mystery. He has inscribed it with the characteristically jaunty words: “The Big Finish!”
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"The unscrupulous are always ready to profit from war."---Christopher Fowler ('Bryant & May: Peculiar London'), English author, 1953-2023
The Victorians lost a few workers in everything they built, rather like a votive offering.
Christopher Fowler, Full Dark House
CHRISTOPHER FOWLER (1953-Died March 3rd 2023,st 69). English thriller writer. While working in the British film industry he became the author of fifty novels and short-story collections, including the Bryant & May mysteries, which record the adventures of two Golden Age detectives in modern-day London. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Fowler