Showing posts with label Brian Catling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Catling. Show all posts

Sep 6, 2025

3 novels and The Great When

Transcript of a video posted yesterday on YouTube. You can watch it HERE
Moore visited his local Waterstones in Northampton to reveal more about The Great When, and three novels that played into his writing of it.  
The Great When has just been released in paperback format
Alan Moore[...] The Great When is the first of five books in the Long London series which is an excavation of some of the more marginal and little known points of London's history that is all stirred up into a very very  baroque fantasy. And there's been a lot of books that have actually very much played into the writing of The Great When. 
 
I mean one of them is Pariah/Genius by my very good friend Ian Sinclair; for my money one of the best writers in the English language. And in Pariah/Genius he's  following the story of John Deakin, who was the photographer that Francis Bacon actually got all  of those images from. And not a very likable man, but a very, very interesting man. And Ian has done this wonderful story about John Deakin. He's already dead when the book opens and the rest of the book is the thought going through the mind of this extraordinary dying man. 
 
Other books that have played into The Great When would include Flann O'Brien, The Third Policeman, probably  one of my favourite novels ever. The main thing about Flann O'Brien's The Third Policeman is it's very, very strange and quite frightening in places but it's very, very funny. And that was something that I was trying to keep in mind while writing my book that there's no reason why  everything has to be straight-faced. There's no problem with having a laugh once in a while. 
 
And the third book that certainly was a huge inspiration was Brian Catling's The Vorrh. This is the first book of a trilogy. But having read this, I realised that Brian had really raised the bar  for fantasy writing because fantasy, as I see it, really shouldn't be about things that you already  know about. I mean, I've got a lot of room for magicians and dragons and all the rest of the fantasy paraphernalia, but I would prefer a fantasy that gives you things that you've never even imagined before. And certainly in the Vorrh trilogy, Brian does that in spades. 
 
So while I  was writing my books, I was thinking of all of these authors and trying to make sure that my book  was at least in the same ballpark as these greats. 
Watch the video HERE  

Aug 6, 2025

The Great Mystery of Brian Catling

In July, Swan River Press published a collection of Brian Catling's stories entitled A Mystery of Remnant and Other Absences, co-edited by Victor Rees and Iain Sinclair. 
More information about the book can be found HERE. 
 
The book includes three new texts written by Moore in response to 3 photographs of Catling as a young man, all of which are included within the book. 
Check below for one of them! Thanks to Victor Rees for this amazing preview.
 
Moore expressed his admiration for Catling's work in several occasions, they were close friends and kindred spirits. Moore also wrote the introduction of Catling's The Vorrh and defined it "The current century's first landmark work of fantasy". 
 

Apr 21, 2019

Cyclopic Moore by Brian Catling

Art by Brian Catling.
Above, a recent portrait of Alan Moore as a cyclops by poet, sculptor, writer, performance artist, and educator Brian Catling

"[...] a revealing portrayal of a well-known warlock from Northampton, celebrating the singularity of his genius."

May 19, 2015

Alan Moore intro for The Vorrh novel

Excerpt from Alan Moore introduction for The Vorrh, a novel by English artist Brian Catling.
The complete introduction can be read here. You can also listen it directly from Moore's voice, here.


Easily the current century’s first landmark work of fantasy and ranking amongst the best pieces ever written in that genre, with The Vorrh we are presented with a sprawling immaterial organism which leaves the reader filthy with its seeds and spores, encouraging new growth and threatening a great reforesting of the imagination.

Comedies of manners set in mews and crescents that have lost their meaning, auto-heroising romps through sloppy pseudo-medieval fens, our writings are increasingly outgunned by our experience and are too narrow to describe, contain, or even name our current circumstance. In the original-growth arbours of The Vorrh, new routes are posited and new agendas are implicit in the sinister viridian dapple. As the greyed-out urban street-grid of our ideologies and ways of thinking falls inevitably into disrepair and disappearance, Catling’s stupefying work provides both viable alternatives and meaningful escape into its tropic possibilities.

It offers us a welcome to the wilderness.


The complete introduction: here
Directly from Moore's voice: here.