Books

www.list.co.uk/books

‘TRY AS I MIGHT I CAN’T SHAKE THE ASSHOLE OFF’ Hitlist THE BEST BOOKS, COMICS & EVENTS*

✽✽ James Kelman Scotland’s only Booker Prize- winner talks about his latest collection of short stories, If it is Your Life. In our glowing recent review, we described the book as ‘a safehouse for the dispossessed and downtrodden’ and ‘grimly gloss-free’. These are good things, incidentally. Word Power Bookshop, Edinburgh, Thu 15 Apr. ✽✽ Andrew Greig The Bannockburn-born poet, novelist and keen mountaineer talks about his latest book At the Loch of the Green Corrie, a fond tribute to the great poet, and his pal, Norman MacCaig. Blackwell, Edinburgh, Tue 6 Apr. ✽✽ Edinburgh Folk Club: Mike Harding As part of Ceilidh Culture, the BBC Radio 2 presenter, whose TV shows Stewart Lee loved as a kid, hosts an evening of lively conversation, jaunty song and humorous poetry. The Pleasance Cabaret Bar, Edinburgh, Fri 9 Apr. ✽✽ Sarah Waters The Welsh-born scribe chats about her latest Booker- nominated affair, the spookily gothic The Little Stranger, which is equally as essential a read as Tipping the Velvet and The Night Watch for committed Watersphiles. See caption, page 36. Waterstone’s, Edinburgh, Tue 13 Apr. ✽✽ Hellblazer See preview, left. Vertigo/Titan. ✽✽ Roddy Doyle The final segment of the Dublin legend’s The Last Roundup trilogy has Henry Smart getting mixed up in the Hollywood system where John Ford hires him as an ‘IRA consultant’. If you’ve read A Star Called Henry and Oh, Play That Thing, then you’ll have to get your mitts on The Dead Republic. See review, page 35. Jonathan Cape.

Highway to hell

His creators may have it in for him, but iconic character John Constantine remains on form. Henry Northmore chats to the writers of the latest Hellblazer chapters

O riginally created by Alan Moore on the pages of his groundbreaking Saga of the Swamp Thing, John Constantine has gone on to become one of the comics world’s most fully realised characters. As writer Jamie Delano explains: ‘Constantine is often described in the following terms, variously combined: chain-smoking; British; working- class magus; The Laughing Magician; ruthless bastard; cunning opponent of both Heaven and Hell; champion of humanity against supernatural oppression and indifference; devious gambler; horror junkie. All of which are appropriate.’

It was Delano who put flesh on the bones of Moore’s creation as the original writer of Constantine’s monthly title Hellblazer, and now the deeply flawed occult conman is celebrating 25 years in print, so it seems only fitting that Delano should return to help mark this anniversary with the release of a new graphic novel Hellblazer: Pandemonium. ‘Try as I might I can’t shake the asshole off,’ says Delano. ‘John Constantine is a dangerous addiction: I enjoy long periods of remission, but inevitably relapse and succumb to temptation, shrugging on the old bastard’s trenchcoat, to again observe the world through his corrosive eye.’ It’s Scottish artist Jock who brings Constantine’s trip to Iraq in Pandemonium to life. ‘An original hardback graphic novel gave me the opportunity to put a lot into the art and apply a style I usually only use on covers throughout the book,’ explains Jock. ‘Jamie’s script was great; there’s a tangible underlying sense of dread throughout the story, not an easy thing to achieve.’

34 THE LIST 1–15 Apr 2010

In the world of comics, characters live on, as writers hand over the reins to the next scribe; Garth Ennis, Warren Ellis and Brian Azzarello have all dipped their toe in the murky Hellblazer world. Even Scottish crime novelists Ian Rankin and Denise Mina made a leap into comics to tackle him. Peter Milligan is the current writer of the ongoing Hellblazer series. ‘Obviously Constantine has to be recognizable as the Constantine that’s been knocking around all these years,’ he explains. ‘And sometimes you have to be careful you don’t directly contradict what’s happened in his long history. But as long as I keep to this I have the freedom to write my version of who I think Constantine is.’ To their credit the Hellblazer comics are set very much within the real world. Most of Constantine’s stories are based on the gritty streets of London, Liverpool or even Glasgow (as seen in Mina’s superb run which can be found in the collected editions Empathy is the Enemy and The Red Right Hand). The supernatural creeps in only subtly, meaning that some richly allegorical real-life tales can also be told. In his first collected edition, Hellblazer: Scab, Milligan tackles the gentrification of London and the role of the unions and strike breakers. ‘I’ve been interested in putting Constantine through the wringer, Job-style, with skin diseases, mental illness, substance addiction and ferocious beatings, and to see what kind of a man staggers out the other side. It’s almost as though I’m trying to see what’ll wipe the smile off his face.’

Hellblazer: Pandemonium and Hellblazer: Scab are out now published by Vertigo/Titan.