Joe (the republic of dogs)

He points to a smaller group of graves, some of which have relatively fresh flowers on them but none of which are freshly dug, around an empty fountain and a small stone statue of an angel.

—Yes. Those are ours. All these others are from over the mountain. They come in wagons, sometimes five or six at a time. Can we go inside?

Joe takes his hat off, bows his head in the rain to the rapidly muddying unmarked graves.

To himself: —For all my friends out on the burial ground.

Athena (motor court)

I can SEE the scritch-scratch. The marks on the page! I hear it from out here now and I watch him make the marks.

Each stroke pains him. And scares him. He cannot imagine that I am here, right here, now. He looks for me wild-eyed but cannot see.

Lulu (motor court)

Lulu bites her nail again; sighs. “I know. I guess you think it’s stupid. But he’s my dad!”

She stands, gulps down her beer, gives Ballard a little wave.

“Well, bye, Ballard. Here goes nothing!”

She wobbles out on her four-inch wedges.

Artists and photographers who influenced BALLARD the republic of dogs

All of these artists found their way into BALLARD the republic of dogs in one way or another.

Francis Bacon

Jackson Pollock

JMW Turner

Philip Guston

Ed Ruscha

Michael Ackerman

Mark Rothko

William Gedney

Stephen Strom

Walker Evans

Robert Frank

Miroslav Tichy

Playlist for BALLARD the republic of dogs

Music that meant a lot to me during the writing of (and probably influenced) BALLARD the republic of dogs:

Bob Dylan—Thunder on the Mountain

Morton Feldman—Rothko Chapel

Bob Dylan—High Water

Gyorgy Ligeti—Viola Sonata (Tabea Zimmerman)

Bob Dylan—Lonesome Day Blues

J.S. Bach—Goldberg Variations (Glenn Gould, ’82 recording)

Rolling Stones—Sympathy for the Devil (Live, ’69)

Rolling Stones—Sway

Bill Evans—Live at The Top of the Gate

Images from BALLARD the republic of dogs

 

E-jacket copy for BALLARD the republic of dogs

“An underground chapel hidden beneath the desert floor …

A stranger who produces fourteen masterpieces …

An apocalyptic flood whose impact reaches across generations …

An endless civil war whose combatants live shattered, shiftless lives …

And a man who may finally find peace at the end of a very long road …

Spanning three generations, and set amidst the unforgiving heat of the California desert, BALLARD the republic of dogs attempts to divine meaning from the intersection of life and art.”

The new BALLARD book …

… is called BALLARD the republic of dogs.

Available on all e-book platforms in early 2013.

It features all of the characters from BALLARD motor court, but in this one they are different ages and in different professions, as if they had taken different paths in their lives. Which they have. I want to work one more time with this cast, too. That third and final volume will be called BALLARD bonus expeditionary force. Once that one is done, I’ll bind them all up in a physical volume as the BALLARD universe.

Here’s the opening of BALLARD the republic of dogs.

“BALLARD” & The Tower

Been away on holiday and am now back at it—working hard on the 2nd BALLARD book, THE REPUBLIC OF DOGS.

Wanted to take a moment to address two questions which have come in from several different readers of BALLARD motor court:

1) where does the name BALLARD come from? and

2) what is The Tower?

The first one is a bit easier to answer, so I’ll start there. J.G. Ballard was a British novelist and short story writer. Two of his books (Crash and Empire of the Sun) have been made into films (by David Cronenberg, and Steven Spielberg, respectively). He is commonly thought of as a science fiction writer, but, in his own words, ” … I was interested in the real future I could see approaching, and less in the invented future that science fiction preferred.” In a preface to The Complete Stories of J.G. Ballard, Martin Amis wrote: “No one is, or was, remotely like him.”

The Complete Stories blew me away when I began reading it several years ago. Ballard’s methods are both rigorous and wildly imaginative. I began to see J.G. Ballard as a detective of the post-modern soul, a psychic investigator of what it meant to be alive in a century besotted with technology. I was hooked … not least by the dull and yet fateful sonority of the word ‘BALLARD.’ As it’s turned out, the sound of that word BALLARD—whispered & terrible—was a bell-toll that reawakened my need to tell stories, to make sense of what I thought it meant to be alive.

So, that’s why my character is named Ballard and why I refer to these as my BALLARD books. On to The Tower … which is also related to J.G. Ballard.

Years ago, I wrote a short story called “blakk,” about a skyscraper which serves as:

a) a type of cinema for hipster-types who like to gather and get off watching apocalyptic films of alien invasions, and

b) a venue for a wildly alcoholic happy-hour gathering of co-workers that over the course of an evening blossoms into a hallucinogenic search through the corridors of this building for the nature of reality.

Suffice to say, it was not very good. But, years later, as I read “The Concentration City” in Ballard’s Complete Stories (which is about a high-rise of planetary proportions), my little skyscraper from “blakk” came back to me and a new way to approach its themes began to work its way through my brain.

There is a “science” behind my idea of The Tower. (It has to do with Michael Talbot’s conception of The Holographic Universe, for any of you who may be interested.) But, for me, The Tower is about enormity and the uncanny ability for enormous things to stay, ultimately, outside the grasp of our conscious minds: these are things which are so large as to be unknowable, unless we dig a little deeper, go a little further out …