Guest Review – “The Angels of Islington” by Sarah Channing Wright

cover-May2014-Preview-200x300Recent Vampire tales tend to fall into one of two camps: those that use the monster in a revisionist way by purposefully avoiding the accepted standard abilities of the creature, and those that use ‘the classic vampire’ to tell their story.

This book is firmly in the second camp. The cover blurb even goes so far as to state that it does not feature any ‘sparkly vampires’ (a barbed comment aimed at Stephanie Myers’ popular teenage romances that feature vampires who cannot come out during the day because the sunlight makes them glitter). The back cover also mentions two other American authoresses, Anne Rice and Poppy Z Brite, and it is the second writer, with her modern journalistic style rather than Rice’s purple prose which Channing Wright seems most similar to.

The difference (an important difference) is the setting. This novel’s setting is as much a character as any of the vampires or mortals that inhabit it. It is awash with references to the London goth scene of ten or fifteen years ago. This does not mean it is out of date or in any way nostalgic, but it just revels in a particular time and place that is seldom talked about in any other media. The vampires of the story listlessly journey from Slimelight to The Dev, from the Electric Ballroom, to Quinns, to Gothic Requiem, to the Princess Louise, to the Underworld, to Kensington Indoor Market. devarms

Most of these locations still exist but a combination of the rise of the internet and simple property-market-brutalism has meant that those days of a gothic underground that all knew each other and relied on fliers (bits of paper, remember them?!) to tell them what was happening next and where, is now history.

The pacing is good. I particularly like the way that periods of normality (for those of us who consider a life spent in clubs and pubs is normal) are interspaced with sudden and graphic acts of violence. The reader enters a world full of monsters where a simple good versus evil morality is absent and seemingly replaced by a battle of order versus chaos, with chaos as the main threat that the protagonists must fight against.

The majority of the characters have ‘nick-names’ such as Magenta or Onyx, as indeed a high proportion of those that came from the punk or the goth scenes of the early eighties did. I’m uncomfortable with a vampire called ‘The Count’ as it seems too obvious to be plausible but ‘what’s in a name?’ and this quibble aside, the book is a romp: an action-packed horror tale full of descriptions of beautiful people living monstrous lives in grubby locations.

There are some great non-fiction books out there (notably by Mick Mercer or Natasha Scharf) that detail the music, fashion and culture of the goth scene but this piece of fiction is probably the first and finest book on goth geography. In fact before this book I don’t think anyone had even conceived of such a subject.

One final point: the cover art is extremely clever and well-executed… but I may be biased as I live with the model!

-Simon Satori

The Angels of Islington book launch will be on Saturday 6th December 2014, and will take place at the Renaissance Alternative Music Festival at Electrowerkz, 7 Torrens Street, London

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Deadvertising: Goth Marketing 101

What?

What?

In an astonishingly lazy display of filling space, that eternal maw of dull list-articles and viral content that makes you feel infected – Buzzfeed – has recycled verbatim the contents of a Tumblr blog. It’s like the Ouroboros of pointless web garbage.

The Tumblr in question is GothScreenshots, which seems to address the aching loneliness of being a Goth by screenshotting empty inboxes, zero notification counts and other online indicators that prove being a Goth means A) only using social media and B) not using it to be social. Uh, we guess?

Being depressed is not the core of this subculture. If we were to screenshot The Blogging Goth’s news feed, you’d see picture after picture of happy, laughing, often drunken Goths and other like-minded people falling about crazily at things like Infest industrial music festival in Bradford. It’s just finished for 2014 – their 2015 early bird tickets sold out in less than 24 hours. But never mind, because the reality of being a Goth online is apparently moping about not having a relationship status.

The comments on the Buzzfeed article are spot on, and I salute each and every commentator. A loud opposition to counter these beliefs is important, so get to it each and every one! In the meantime, we came across a much nicer video from – where else? – Germany that warms the cockles of our cold, dead hearts *hand-staple-forehead*.

I think many of us could identify with the young lady in that video – and we’d LOVE to come home to a pitch black house like this one! If this girl has anything to be upset about, it’s the ostracism and opposition Goths can receive every day from colleagues, friends, family and even complete strangers. But that’s an older topic, and this should be a happier article – so enjoy some other examples of Goth advertising gone right. Or at least better.

If you have any suggestions, please leave us a comment below!



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Autopsy of an Alt-Fest

Hello and welcome to the third anniversary of The Blogging Goth! It started as a degree project but was always bound to occur when a proud Goth with a love of writing gets an internet connection. You can read the earliest article over here, back when the blog was on Tumblr.

More recently, the entire UK Goth scene has been reeling from – perhaps not unanticipated – collapse of Alt-Fest, the wildly ambitious live music festival that should have been kicking off on Friday 15th August.

Continue reading

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I don’t believe that it’s the fault of Slenderman or horror writing in general that this happened. I remember reading scary stories and watching slasher movies when I was a child and young teenager and while they certainly gave me nightmares, they did not instill within me a desire to murder my friends. For someone to make the jump from reading a creepy story that is … being presented as 100% fiction into actually using it as a motive to plot and murder another human being – something else has to be going on there. — Creepypasta.com, Statement on the Wisconsin Stabbing.

 

I’ve chosen to lead with the quote that the Daily Mail – arch-conservative British newspaper and repeat offender on this blog – pushed, reluctantly, to the bottom of their article in order to grudgingly demonstrate balance and lack of bias. The declaration by the girls involved in the Waukesha stabbing that they were influenced by the internet’s fictional horror story creation Slenderman must have come as a blessing to the Mail’s hacks. The writers are reequired by the paper’s policies to find some external anomaly that caused a tragedy, rather than addressing deeper underlying issues like mental illness, or lack of internet access monitoring.

They struggled equally with the Elliot Rodgers killings in Santa Barbara, saying “A good looking boy, it is impossible to say what caused Rodgers’ problems with women, but apart from his parents’ divorce, there are no clues in his background as to the deeply troubled loner he would become.” The Mail cannot grasp the complexities and difficulties of mental illness, or the expression of counter-culture beliefs, and more worryingly this is one of the most popular media outlets in the world. Certainly Rodgers’ backwards, misogynist attitude towards women resonates uncomfortably with the Mail’s ‘sidebar of shame‘.

So it is a cause of additional concern to The Blogging Goth that they have now seized on the innocent interests of the Geyser family, raiding their social media presence to try and ‘explain’ the actions of their very confused, very ill daughter Morgan. It’s like a checklist of misunderstood fear: 

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 Because of this one, anomalous, little-understood tragedy, again the Mail has ostracized and assigned blame to a culture they barely understand – lumping blame on an unrelated issue in a crude, quasi-journalistic attempt to be ‘first’ with the explanation. It’s almost grimly ironic that the Daily Mail would have such an issue with a creative writing website, considering the inventive nature of their reporting on cancer.

Acting on a hunch, I decided to search the Mail’s website for their coverage of notoriously-grisly – and massively popular – HBO television series Game of Thrones. Reporting on a show awash with dramatic murder is apparently not a problem, helpful considering how much traffic and revenue the Mail can make off the series. No doubt the editors are hoping no lone killer will rampage and blame Martin’s wildly popular series, because then the paper will be forced to revert to type and pin all the blame on this one, external, yet clearly causative influence. Assuming, of course, they have the conviction of their assumptions.

This paper’s irresponsible reporting threatens to whip up a moral panic based on inaccurate assumptions and blame culture that has been repeated too many times before. Time and again the media – the Daily Mail included – would like to blame subcultures for crimes committed, shirking their responsibility to find out the truth and inform, rather than scare people. I ask – I beg – the media to pause, take stock, to do your jobs and actually interview people somehow linked – not just cut-and-paste a parsimonious block quote as lip service to the concept of unbiased reporting.

Goth culture is not, has never been, and I trust will never be, some kind of crucible for such horrendous behaviour.  There is nothing wrong with a fascination with the darker side of life, having an interest in skulls on Instagram and ‘Gothic-themed pictures’, or being a massive horror movie fan

Well, Daily Mail. If it gets visitors, it isn’t really such a bad thing after all, is it?

 

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World Goth Day 2014

Happy World Goth Day 2014, readers! It’s delightfully grey and cold here in Leeds, England – breaking a surprising and inconvenient sunny spell, and letting me dust off the leather and waistcoats of winter. Last year, we talked to WGD organiser Cruel Britannia, so today we’re watching the dark shenanigans unfold!

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Twitter has been incredibly vibrant all day, just check out the #WorldGothDay discussion and tweet us too! We’ve all been discussing our plans, and you can find a great index on the main site here.

We also dipped into media coverage, which was the usual mixed bag of space-filling and trend-chasing journalists looking at each blankly, saying “Goth? Is that still going?” Some articles we visited included a great music compilation by a South-East Asian social media site called Rappler, and a wry piece in the Telegraph (we’re as surprised as you!) by Dr. Tim Stanley that also addresses concerning new data about self-harm amongst alternative teenagers.

The authors of this study are to be commended for the way it is written, with such statements as:

“The scientists were clear the research does not ‘prove’ that identifying with alternative culture ‘causes’ teens to self-harm. Rather it is equally likely that isolated teenagers struggling with emotional difficulties are naturally drawn to a musical (sub)culture that expresses these feelings and membership may even have positive social or cathartic effects.”

DANI FILTH_608x376Uneasily straddling the divide between great reporting and, well… Dani Filth, is Kerrang! radio. Sadly, at 11pm the Cradle of Filth front-man will take over, but on the up side you can listen again to their discussions about Goth culture, including some great conversations with the dedicated people behind the S.O.P.H.I.E Charity.
Granted, arguing about ‘What is Goth’ is our equivalent of the chicken and the egg tale, but Dani Filth is reviled by a great many Goths, and has himself in the past scorned the subculture, preferring to market his band as making whatever music will propel them forwards – or failing that, just making offensive shirts. At least Eldritch hasn’t compromised on his vision!

Further down the spectrum of decent journalism were efforts by TIME magazine who seemed to show a lot of people on Twitter laughing about their ill-advised, badly-executed forays into Goth in the past. Another glossy magazine, Vogue, decided to frankly terrify readers with revisiting a Marilyn Manson style makeover, committing two Goth faux pas in one!

Also guilty of mixing up the shock-rocker, alternative-scene embarrassment originally known as Brian Warner is The Guardian. When we read this article, we took to twitter for a few choice comments.

It’s not like we haven’t noticed this problem with The Guardian before – a paper that you’d assume would be sympathetic to the middle-class British institution of Goth has been making mistakes since we started blogging in 2011 – along with most other major news outlets!

Conversely, regional titles seem to cover it best. Early today we read an article in the Plymouth Herald that stood out for one good reason above all the national competitors. It talked to actual Goths, and the comments below this – and many other stories – have been some of the best reading we’ve done today.

That’s what it’s about, of course. Those of us who know it isn’t a fashion trend, or celebrity fad, or even celebrating ‘one day a year’. Fly the flag today, for sure, but don’t put it in a cupboard and forget about it until next May 22nd. As Ministry remind us…

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