The
heatwave set in last week and continued into this one, baking
northern England in particular. The locals walk their pitbulls in the
blistering sun. A flat a few doors down blasts Dr. Dre's 2001. The
police arrive to make them turn it down.
Saturday
morning: I park up near the gym. I've not even got out of my car and
I've already been chatted up by a transvestite. Gonna be one of those
days, I tell myself.
Saturday
evening on the Littlemoor Riviera: A solitary Tarzan call shatters
the idyllic urban silence of the street. I look out of my window, and
see no-one.
Later,
a young couple have a domestic on the street. There's some grabbing,
both ways, but nothing overly physical. They leave together out of
view.
I
spend every free daylight moment I can sat outside, noticing these
things, reading. Occasionally I jump rope, in search of the six-pack
I once had. The local girls accuse me of showing off.
This
week at the gym I tried a second, slimmer type of cross trainer with
a slightly less elliptical, circular motion. I struck out training
forward- the motion is akin to walking with poles- but training in
reverse I managed to get 2 PBs.
I
finished Money, by Martin Amis. John Self is a 30-something movie
money-man, making deals and spending like the privilaged, streetwise
hoodlum that he is. He two-times his girlfriends, visits hookers,
buys porn, tries a range of drugs and gradually fucks up his life. He
fully accepts that he'll kill himself eventually, but it seems
someone is keen to do that favour for him...
An
interesting novel. It's gripping and believable, although the
narrator is frequently and contradictorily cunning and intelligent
and eloquent yet portrayed as a dumb street hooligan in a suit. He's
reminiscient, in that way, of Victor Ward in Glamorama and Patrick
Bateman in American Psycho- they were both “bimboys”- good
looking idiots who happened to be successful, and could show their
intelligence when the story required them to. Money and AP both have
wealthy, money-driven and slightly soullless narrators. Money,
however, was first published in 1984, when yuppie culture was I full
flow. AP came out in '91 and Glamorama in '98. The book has that
instant freshness of the period, like a first-hand account. It's
occasionally over-descriptive, but, hey, it was the eighties.
A
good read. By the way, I got my copy signed. Check it out.
Apologies for this pic appearing upside down. This doesn't happen anywhere else on my computer. For fuck's sake.
2
months 'til Ibiza.
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