Skip to content
Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter. Everything in one handy email.
When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

Earlier this month, first-time novelist Mark Teppo asked on his blog. “Where is the 21st Century gonzo pulp?” It made me stop and think. What was he talking about?

You see, Mark had stopped in a bookstore in the middle of nowhere. On his way out, he found an entire bookshelf devoted to pulp novels. Mark was rushed, but he was able to grab London, Bloody London by Michael Avallone.

The book sounds crazy. It features Avallone’s super-spy, Ed Noon (about whom Avallone wrote several dozen novels), who:

“To the casual eye, Ed Noon might have looked like a typical American tourist, wandering through London with his eyes wide open, peering in all directions. But the sights Noon wanted to see didn’t include Big Ben, Carnaby Street, or the swinging sin-spots of Soho. Noon was hunting an aging master scientist, a wizard child prodigy, a queer little man named Malvolio, a sinister secret agent named O’Connell, a super sex-bomb named Christine, a few other assorted lads and lasses with wanton wiles and lethal ways.”

Um, what? That sounds crazy. Now, I’m talking about more than just weird books, I’m talking about gonzo books, which in my mind are different enough from weird books to be considered on their own. Often, gonzo books are weird, but they are always fast-paced. Many of the pulps were gonzo books. Weird books are often from writers who have respectability in the field: Pynchon, Lafferty, Ballard, etc. but gonzo books are often written under pseudonyms or by people who didn’t catch the public’s eye.

If we use film as an entry way for how to think of what I mean as gonzo versus weird, think Miike over Lynch, or Bekmambetov over Jodorowsky. The fast pacing means a lot. Pushing boundaries also means a lot. The…extreme-ness…means a lot, too. Gonzo, to me, is reading sections of the book and shaking my head in disbelief, but because it was so surreal I’m almost lost, and moreover the scene was so big and over-the-top that I can’t believe the author thought of it in the first place.

Aside from just saying “all the pulps were gonzo” and pointing you towards a place like Hang Fire Books to find copies, let me provide a few examples:

Edward Whittemore (Quins Shanghai Circus and The Jerusalem Quartet the link provides access to all four books) is a great example of gonzo writing. And he is also a great example of extremely talented writing that was over-shadowed by the over-the-top feeling that suffused most of the text. Other examples include Charles Stross’s Laundry books (The Atrocity Archives and Jennifer Morgue) and Tim Power’s Declare although Declare isn’t as fast-paced as the other examples. And there are more; Iain Sinclair, Michael Avallone, and even some R. A. Lafferty.

Philip K. Dick and Steve Aylett are almost right, but their writing tends to be slower-paced than what I’m thinking of when I think gonzo writing. Someone like Charlie Huston carries the atmosphere of gonzo, but isn’t strange enough to make the cut. So, Stross aside, who’s writing this type of fiction today? This type of writing was once big business, has it gone the way of the dodo? I suspect the general exploitiveness and misogyny of the work killed it off as we got through the 1970s. But I think it’s due for an update.

Anyone out there writing and publishing this stuff? You’ve got a customer.


[Image from Flickr user net_efekt; CC licensed for commercial use]

About the Author

About Author Mobile

John Klima

Author

If you want to get in touch with me, use editor[at]electricvelocipede[dot]com rather than posting here. I don't mind the e-mail and you'll have a better chance of hearing back from me. I edit the Hugo Award winning speculative fiction magazine Electric Velocipede. In 2007, Bantam published Logorrhea, my anthology of stories based on spelling-bee winning words. EV Website Blog Logorrhea You can also find me online at Facebook [John Klima], Twitter [johnklima], and Flickr [johncklima]. If you can guess what the 'c' stands for in johncklima, I'll give you a cookie. If you are a publisher of short fiction anthologies or single-author story collections, I want to see them! Please send material to: John Klima, PO Box 266, Bettendorf, IA 52722
Learn More About John
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
16 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments