I just fell over laughing, to hear on Have I got News For You that Sarah Palin has called for Julian Assange to be executed! But then I’m fond of endangered species, like Polar Bears, ice caps, authors, and apparently freedom of speech too. This I will say for Abrams, no one I knew there seemed to like Sarah Palin very much. Perhaps they’ve changed, because some did seem very fond indeed of Prison Break, and that strange character, T-bag. DCD
WIKILEAKS AND THE NOBEL PRIZE
The case of Assange could not have been thrown into greater relief than by that of the nobel prize winner, wu zhao bo. Apart from locking him up, China is making no pretence of using government power to intimidate academics, close down websites, and keep the news of bo’s prize in Oslo away from its own people. Does America really want to be associated though, as it is being, with that kind of attack on anyone, rather than embracing much of the spirit of what Wikileaks has done, and why the internet is a chance for significant world freedoms? If it is the job of some aspects of the intelligence services, military, or the administration, to protect information, and work in the corridors of diplomacy, it is surely the duty of journalists to find and reveal the truth. Of course there are limits, and one is The News of the World case, for instance, and mobile phone tapping, when personal privacy seems to have been invaded, for reasons that have little to do with the public interest. Although any journalist, and probably any intelligence service, knows it can be a fine line. DCD
Filed under Uncategorized
WIKILEAKS, AMERICA AND ABRAMS
Perhaps it’s a little meretricious to compare what happened with me and a New York publisher, to the Julian Assange/Wikileaks affair, yet there are some parallels. To me, among other things, the principle of freedom of speech was directly attacked, by the very people who are most supposed to defend it, in this case a prominent and respected American publisher. In that, perhaps you can begin to ‘see the universe in a grain of sand’, because, if so much in life is about leverage, I believe I also became the fulcrum for an internal power struggle, that has seen my publisher replaced, my ex promoted, and my editor made Publisher, and Vice President. What I felt, in that appalling battle, above all was the bullying tactics of corporations, ripe with their internal political fears, secrecy, concern for jobs and pockets of power, and the extraordinary arrogance of some too. If the individual is so damaged in all that, then something is gravely wrong, because the human is lost entirely. I am not saying there are not merits in a hardworking and talented editor achieving such a promotion, but the way it came about is awful. Is it wrong to compare leaks that might endanger lives, to the case of an individual career and livelihood wrecked, and simple fantasy books harmed, especially where I had to expose where I had gone wrong myself, in order to talk about it at all? Not entirely.
The point about any Whistleblower, and they usually have a very hard ride, because it’s easier to join the group and toe the line, not to mention being sometimes frightening, is that they often expose things that are wrong, and indeed detrimental to all our freedoms. America, viewed from many quarters, when it persecutes a British computer hacker who has a psychological problem, for instance, often uses a hammer to crack a nut, and completely loses respect in doing it. That big government attitude is often quickly picked up in the psyches of corporate bosses too, perhaps it’s those Presidential titles, who feel they can do pretty much anything they please, and disrespect even contracts, with the threat of throttling potential or achieved success.
There are so many things to be said about the inevitability of leaks taking place, and the need for them sometimes, that all real journalists and also politicians understand; about the stateless territory of the internet too, and about the true meaning of human and world freedom. A very good US commentator on Newsnight though, the night before last, stressed that if Assange has committed crimes, so be it, a legal process must take its course, which Assange does not seem to be trying to avoid. But that is not the same as trying to shut down Wikileaks itself, or in my case trying to shut down an author. Because if America takes up the foolish crusade that this is only an ‘attack’ on America, it may make itself the world enemy not the crusader, and ignores the fact that other documents reveal shady dealings in many areas, not least the relationship between Putin and Berlusconi. Remember Assange also won the Amnesty International Media Award. The Newsnight interviewee also made the crucial point though, that if Government tries to assault internet freedoms themselves, which may be good or bad, but are certainly a reality, and perhaps extra-judicially, then the very first people who will make use of the changing climate, are businesses and corporations. They often do not act with the same legal propriety and safeguards that can be the good side of responsible government, although the very core of any debate on modern government, is always where the lines blur between honest politicians, and big business interests. But what is the internet equivalent of those days when ambitious bankers were caught rooting in the dustbins of their rivals, engaging in a form of industrial espionage? From Trojans, to inbuilt obsolescence in systems, like the original electric lightbulb, companies are very capable of attacks and dodgy if not criminal practice. But perhaps what is ‘extra-judicial’ on the internet simply has not been defined, and justice is a territorial matter too. I am sure Julian Assange’s lawyers will argue it will be very hard for him to get a fair trial now, anyway. This is a watershed in so many ways, not least for publishers, themselves trying to access how to compete in new markets, define and defend their and their author’s voices, in the blizzard of information technology, and beyond the hunt for money, supposedly to defend what is truly valuable in culture, politics and society. To me it is usually the real protection of the individual, and very often that is about maximum transparency. DCD
Filed under Uncategorized
THE POET’S SWEATSHOP – PROUD TO SHARE A GEM FOR ALL SEASONS
LEARNING TO SKI
(For Rosanna)
The hillside is a blank page
On which I carve my hieroglyphs:
Snowplow, slalom, parallel turn.
A week ago these signifiers
Were incomprehensible to me;
Now I speak the language of the slopes,
Shifting the weight of consonants on my tongue –
Snowplow, slalom, parallel turn.
I swoop on bladed feet across the silence.
I thought I’d miss the moment, at my time of life,
To master a new dialect of risk.
But you have taught me things about myself I never guessed;
You have shown me blue skies where only blizzards flew;
Folds of sunlight on mountainsides;
Valleys wedged in the doorway of heaven.
C. Anthony Gardner 2010
Anthony is a novelist, Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, editor of the RSL, the Society’s Review, and founder of http://www.tomorrowsbooks.com
His novel, The Rivers of Heaven, is published by Starhaven. He lives in London, with Rosanna and Sasha.
Filed under Poetry
PHOENIX TAKES WING – WITH ALL OUR WRITERS THE STARS!
DRAGON IN THE POST: TO JOIN THE SERIALISED STORY NOW, FREE AND AS IT’S WRITTEN, CLICK
Filed under Childrens Books, Fantasy, Free Story, Uncategorized
TALES OF THE VERY UNEXPECTED
It’s interesting Roald Dahl, any children’s author’s hero, thought of a ‘consequences style’ story, just discovered by The Sunday Times. Phoenix was thinking of one too. Many thoughts here, and many unexpected consequences, when a story is given to the world, but what is it that writers have to do to be respected, and protected? Is the only value we hold nowadays, not 12 years at a craft, starred reviews, awards, reports of books not staying on the shelves in School Libraries, fantastic letters, praised presentations, even three hundred thousand sales, but only that thing called a ‘best seller’, especially in ‘success’ obsessed America? Because it is really all about money and power, and the growing ruthlessness inside publishing houses, propping up big teams, and big money machines? I sent a file of precious fan letters received to my publisher, but that did not wake any one up either.
It is to the absolute shame of any editor though, inside that system, if they will not protect the essential openness and flow of creativity, vital to any real artist. Even let the beautiful Cleaner Wrasse feed, in the protective shadow of the great whales. Only partly because of a supposedly private matter, that stamped itself all over a publisher in New York. Where once I had a wonderful link to a designer, to a team, my editor fought for nothing but their own power base. So a writer was forced to work into a brick wall, with not even that one classic guarantee at least afforded to authors in a contract, respected either, namely some minor and genuine say in a cover. Art is about beauty, value, story into meaning, true culture, but expressed in the full and free expression of the author, whether it’s fantasy, literary fiction, or non-fiction. Unless those people who build ‘their lists’ guard those things with all they are, only the principle of money through gimmicks will prevail, not real storytellers at all. I’m not jealous of the big hitters, and readers set the pace, because if you don’t like a book, put it away. But I do not agree the market is the only meaning, in anything, and at Phoenix the power of story has to win this one, and perhaps online too, help to affect some kind of sea-change. No one at all takes a lead nowadays, and the confusion as to what we might be reading, who takes those gems to the public, and who the Gatekeepers now are, is writ large everywhere. The threat of online and Kindle is that there are no Gatekeepers at all, so how are brilliance or quality defended and identified, and how do they survive in the marketplace? That is a debate that simply has to be engaged in by everyone, and fought out in every sphere, but I suggest writers have a very big say in the matter. DCD
The opinions expressed by David Clement-Davies are unique to him, and not to be seen as the opinions of Phoenix Ark Press. That is the difference between a writer’s blog, and a publishing website, profiling several pieces of work, and both contained at WordPress. Phoenix Ark Press is a Limited Company.
Filed under America and the UK, Publishing, The Arts
THE PHOENIX GNOMES AT WORK
Over the next three days the Phoenix Gnomes will be hard at work, like the elves in the weary shoemaker’s shop, cleaning up the valiant work of the founder. So the black text bleed against red, a famous design blip, and the hazing of text, will disappear.
NAVIGATION: Incidentally, for those not quite used to WordPress, to get around you can virtually click on anything. For instance, if a post has been ‘pressed’, click it, and the full blog page will appear. To get back to the Blog, from individal ‘pages’, listed at the top, just click the Blog title, Phoenix Ark.
Filed under Books, The Phoenix Story
SLOW INSTALMENTS!
Many apologies for taking so long with Dragon In the Post, below, but many discoveries are being made. Not to compare you, dear reader, with a fish from the Foundless Sea, but they say if you’re not hooked by the first three chapters, a tale isn’t worth the telling. Well, I’m hooked, and want to know what happens, which I don’t know yet, if you see what I mean, so more to come. A very big thank you too, to some special people. To Dinah, in Texas, to Tiffany Bertrand, to Bill, who gave us our very first Donation, to Barb, who generously overpaid us, to Marcin Dabrowski, for working so hard for the love of what he does, and very genuinely, to anyone who has written to the Blog, whether encouragingly, or scolding an excess of anger, or personal revelation. That warmth, generosity and care, the pure inspiration of some of your letters, has literally kept the founder going, when he might have given up on the story a long time back. A thumbs up to WordPress too, despite not always answering queries, for believing in the First Amendment, and creating such a brilliant and adaptable creative tool. We’re very far from there yet, but not even the Black Warlock will stop us now!
Filed under America and the UK, Community, The Phoenix Story
