Wednesday, January 20, 2016

20 Questions with Paul Brazill



It’s hard to hang around the crime fiction community much and not come across the name Paul Brazill. (Often mispronounced, but still.) Paul is the author of Guns of Brixton, Cold London Blues, The Last Laugh, and Other Shots of Noir. Born in England, Paul now lives in Poland. He’s a member of the International Thriller Writers whose writing has been translated into Italian, German and Slovene. His writing has appeared in various magazines and anthologies, including The Mammoth Books of Best British Crime. He has edited a few anthologies, including the best-selling True Brit Grit with Luca Veste.  

Today Paul is here to talk about new newest book, Kill Me Quick!
                                                                                                            
One Bite at a Time: Tell us about Kill Me Quick.
Paul D. Brazill: Seatown may not have a lot going for it – apart from the Roy Orbison lookalikes and Super Seventies Special every Thursday night, of course – but it is at least the place Mark Hammonds calls home. And after a decade away, it's the place he returns to when he has nowhere else to go. From dead bikers to dodgy drug deals, from one downbeat bar to another, from strippers to gangsters and back again: the luckless former musician bounces from one misdeed to the next along with a litany of old acquaintances, almost as though he never left. And if only he can shake off everybody who wants to kill, maim, or otherwise hurt him, maybe he could even think about staying. After all, there’s no place like home, eh?

OBAAT: Where did you get this idea, and what made it worth developing for you? (Notice I didn’t ask “Where do you get your ideas?” I was careful to ask where you got this idea.)
PB: I’d read Cathi Unsworths Weirdo and re-read Graham Greene’s Brighton Rock around the same time. Both take place at the English seaside. I was e-chatting with Cathi about the lack of seaside noirs. She suggested a few books, and since I’d set a few short stories in the fictional seaside town of Seatown I thought I’d give it a go. Can’t hang a man for that!

Kiss Me Quick hats used to be very popular at the English seaside so the title was obvious.

OBAAT: How long did it take to write Kill Me Quick, start to finish?
PB:  About six to eight weeks, with gaps, breaks. I left it to marinate for a couple of weeks and then tidied it up. Went back to it about a week later.

OBAAT: Where did Mark Hammonds come from? In what ways is he like, and unlike, you?
PB:  Well, he is a bit like me in that he drinks too much and is always one step behind the action. His musical career was much better than mine, of course!

I’ve known, and know, lots of musicians of various degrees of success and Mark is like many of them. He’s someone who had his moment in the sun and has absolutely no idea what to do with the rest of his life. He’s just about clever enough to know that he’s not particularly clever though he does have one moment of inspiration in the book.

OBAAT: In what time and place is Kill Me Quick set? How important is the setting to the book as a whole?
PB: It’s for sure set in the north east of England. It’s where I grew up. It’s in the fictional town of Seatown, which is an exaggerated grotesque version of my hometown and its environs.

It’s post ‘80s. It had to be set after the ‘80s because that was a time when a few British bands had a degree of success that they never really recaptured.

OBAAT: How did Kill Me Quick come to be published?
PB: Around the time I was thinking of writing a ‘seaside noir’, I read and liked a few books from the publisher Number 13 Press. Their plan was to publish 13 novellas on the 13th of each month. That kick started me into writing the book and submitting it to them. I made the deadline, just!

OBAAT: What kinds of stories do you like to read? Who are your favorite authors, in or out of that area?
PB: I mainly like stories about people with strong personality and writing that has personality, too. Crime fiction offers up a lot of that.

Naming names: Raymond Chandler, Elmore Leonard, Nelson Algren, Charles Bukowski, Les Edgerton, Oscar Wilde, KA Laity, Damon Runyon, PG Wodehouse, Dorothy Parker, and Heath Lowrance are good examples. There are loads of others, of course.

OBAAT: What made you decide to be an author?
PB: I didn’t. It’s something I stumbled into. I’d always quite liked the idea of it, of course, because writers used to have such strong personalities and lived such full and rich lives in the old days - Capote, Mailer, Wilde, Greene etc. Now they just play Bejeweled Blitz and moan a lot on Twatter, of course.

But I fell into writing after messing around on social media and found some flash fiction websites that I liked – Beat To A Pulp, A Twist Of Noir. I thought I’d give it a shot and still seem to be getting away with it.

OBAAT: How do you think your life experiences have prepared you for writing crime fiction?
PB: Well, I’m not scared of made up versions of violence because real life is worse, of course. I’ve met lots of colourful, interesting people. Heard lots of interesting stories. Seen some funny and weird things. They’ve given me stuff to use. Whether or not I write crime fiction is another story, of course.

OBAAT: What do you like best about being a writer?
PB: I enjoy writing and finishing it. Anything else is a bonus.

OBAAT: Who are your greatest influences? (Not necessarily writers. Filmmakers, other artists, whoever you think has had a major impact on your writing.)
PB:  People with strong personalities or whose ‘art’ has a strong personality. Tony Hancock, Tom Waits, Alan Bennet, Ealing comedy, Damon Runyon, Bukowski, Mamet, Tarantino, Billy Wilder, Mar E Smith. All the writers that I’ve mentioned and many more. Certainly real people at least as much as entertainers. No names no pack-drill.

OBAAT: Do you outline or fly by the seat of you pants? Do you even wear pants when you write?
PB:  As in the rest of my life, I wing it. Fully clothed. We may only be writers but we’re not barbarians!

OBAAT: Give us an idea of your process. Do you edit as you go? Throw anything into a first draft knowing the hard work is in the revisions? Something in between?
PB: Block my block. Word by word. Sentence by sentence. Leave it for a bit and tidy it up. Two steps forward, one step back. I think Les Edgerton does the same thing so that’s alright.

OBAAT: Do you listen to music when you write? Do you have a theme song for this book? What music did you go back to over and over as you wrote it, or as you write, in general?
PB: I don’t usually listen to music as I write as I’m too easily distracted but film soundtracks sometimes work.

The theme song for Kill Me Quick! Could the theme to the ‘70s British sitcom Whatever Happened To the Likely Lads?

I’ve been listening to the soundtrack to The Phantom of the Paradise a lot recently and who knows how that’s influencing me!

OBAAT: As a writer, what’s your favorite time management tip?
PB: Time is a concept created by the bourgeoisie to oppress the proletariat. I have no time management skills. Que sera sera.

OBAAT: If you could give a novice writer a single piece of advice, what would it be?
PB: Never give or listen to advice. Enjoy yourself, it’s later than you think. Enjoy yourself, while you’re still in the pink.

OBAAT: Generally speaking the components of a novel are story/plot, character, setting, narrative, and tone. How would you rank these in order of their importance in your own writing, and can you add a few sentences to tell us more about how you approach each and why you rank them as you do?
PB: Character and atmosphere are the main thing for me. If it ‘feels’ right then I stick with it. I’d write better plots if I could but I’m not clever or organized enough.

OBAAT: If you could have written any book of the past hundred years, what would it be, and what is it about that book you admire most?
PB: Maybe, Gerald Kersh’s Night and The City. Atmosphere characters and a proper story.

OBAAT: Favorite activity when you’re not reading or writing.
PB: Life.

OBAAT: What are you working on now?
PB: Back From the Dead. A sort - of follow up to Guns of Brixton and Cold London Blues – both published by Caffeine Nights Publishing. Darker and more violent but still funny, I hope.

A short story for the next NoirCon programme.

11 comments:

Paul D Brazill said...

Thanks for the interview, Dana.

David Barber said...

A great Q & A session, gents. Paul's a top bloke and I don't know many other scribblers who he hasn't helped out somewhere along the way.

Anonymous said...

A nice interview. Paul is not only a good writer, but like David said, he's helped a lot of others on the way. I love his expressive voice.


Jeanette Cheezum

Les Edgerton said...

What David and Elaine said--Paul's helped a heap of his fellow writers and we all owe him a huge debt. What does it for me with Paul is his turn of phrase that no one else has like he does. I reread his books and stories often, just for the pleasure of those truly original sentences. Here's a secret he doesn't know--when I'm writing a novel, I have several of his works laying around and I dip into them often and they always provide inspiration for my own sentences. Like someone said-Picasso?--good artists borrow; great artists steal. I've stolen so much from Paul by rights he probably should be listed as co-author. It's great to see two of my favorite writers get together here. Thanks, Dana and thanks, Paul.

Paul D Brazill said...

Thanks everyone! And Les, you're FAR too kind.

Unknown said...

I agree, Paul has always been really supportive. My first thrii as a crime writer was when he chose a story of mine for his best of the year list. This past year it was an honor to share the pages of Rouge from NTTK with him and a bunch of other great writers. I wish him mucy success- he deserves it!!

Unknown said...

I agree, Paul has always been really supportive. My first thrii as a crime writer was when he chose a story of mine for his best of the year list. This past year it was an honor to share the pages of Rouge from NTTK with him and a bunch of other great writers. I wish him mucy success- he deserves it!!

Unknown said...

I agree. Paul has been a real inspiration to me and I treasure his support. My first big thrill as a crime writer came when Paul named a story of mine to his best of the year list. This past year it was an honor to share pages with him and a bunch of other great writers in Rogue from NTTK. He is indeed a top bloke and is deserving of much success!

Unknown said...

I agree. Paul has been a real inspiration to me and I treasure his support. My first big thrill as a crime writer came when Paul named a story of mine to his best of the year list. This past year it was an honor to share pages with him and a bunch of other great writers in Rogue from NTTK. He is indeed a top bloke and is deserving of much success!

seana graham said...

Great interview, you guys.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I'm looking forward to the followup to Guns of Brixton and to a T-shirt from Paul that says "I Got GOB" on it.

Ted Lewis' GBH is another British crime novel that aims some fairly savage barbs at British seaside towns, so I figured those towns must occupy some kind of a small but definite place in the British psyche.