Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts

Monday, 10 November 2014

Book review and interview: Defiance by Lucas Bale


Earlier in the year I reviewed the debut novel of science fiction writer Lucas Bale. The Heretic plunged the reader into a frightening and chaotic universe. In my original review I wrote:
“The author paints an uncomfortable and frequently bleak vision of a future in which humanity has spread beyond the ruins of an Earth destroyed by climate change and conflict.”
Lucas Bale has been busy and has already made the second instalment in the series available for pre-order on Amazon. I was fortunate enough to be invited to read a pre-release version.

You can pre-order Defiance here: Amazon.com or Amazon UK.

The world of Beyond the Wall comes of age

While The Heretic was an excellent introduction to the fictional universe of Lucas Bale, Defiance goes deeper. The first volume felt like a prelude to a series of grand scope and in the second we see that series flower and unfold. The pervading sense of danger and chaos is communicated very well and the tone is unrelentingly dark, gritty, and realistic.

This is not an optimistic science fiction future in which all of our problems are solved — if anything, humanity faces more and bigger problems than at any other point in history, with a deeply stratified society causing misery and poverty for millions. There’s a notion that the elite have a conscious plan of allowing the worst of humanity to die out in the name of civilisation. Attempts to terraform planets are sometimes abandoned halfway through, leaving unstable climates and settlements exposed to the ravages of space. Interstellar travel is an arcane art and only vaguely understood.

This sense of realism and detail permeates every page, and the descriptive writing is really rather excellent. The overall result is majestic.

New characters

The story of Defiance is told from the viewpoints of three new characters. All are complex and driven by a potent cocktail of fears, hopes and neuroses. I found the story arc of Natasha particularly intriguing. A tunnel navigator, she is one of the misunderstood few who can use their senses to feel their way through hyperspace. It’s a novel take on interstallar travel and tunnel navigators are shunned by those around them. Weaver, another primary character, is a Caestor investigating a murder.

Both end up at the dilapidated colony of Jieshou — a forlorn but vividly depicted location. Events later move to an abandoned spaceship and this is the best section of the book, utterly chilling and almost unbearably tense.

Defiance is an excellent book. It’s classic science fiction, written with skill and panache. Good as it is, I think that Lucas Bale is only just getting into his stride, and that the best of this series is still to come.

Interview with Lucas Bale

I got in touch with the author to ask him about his work, and he has kindly provided these fascinating insights into his writing.

In The Heretic we catch a glimpse of the world you’re creating in Beyond the Wall, but in Defiance that world unfolds and we see a cruel universe of majestic scale. How do you approach your world-building?

I have always preferred ‘hard science-fiction’. My natural inspiration seems to derive from stories which appear to me to be theoretically possible – they are more compelling to me. Perhaps the simple fact I can relate it to something real makes it more chilling, more believable. The crux of hard science-fiction is the relationship between the accuracy, and amount, of the scientific detail in the story and the rest of the narrative. In 1993, Gary Westfahl suggested that one requirement for hard science-fiction is that a story “should try to be accurate, logical, credible and rigorous in its use of current scientific and technical knowledge about which technology, phenomena, scenarios and situations that are practically and/or theoretically possible.” So, I look to our own world and ask how things might develop if the events which I know have taken place, or are taking place, in the Beyond the Wall series had actually occurred.

When actually world-building, I use two intertwined approaches – macro and micro. When planning the setting for Beyond the Wall, I began with macro. I had an idea for a setting – a time and place, and themes and atmospheres, I wanted to explore. I created a chronology and history, which led to mapping, planet names, ideology, cultural influences, dramatis personae, technology, crime and law enforcement and so on – but these all came from that starting point. I brainstormed from that vision and asked questions – if a given event occurred, what would it lead to? If a character sought a particular outcome, how would they achieve it and what would they need to sacrifice in order to bring about that outcome? How would others react? What is humanity like in my setting? What is important to them, as compared to the issues the world faces now?

Curiously, that meant I moved quite swiftly to micro. I had characters growing in my head and began to ask questions about those characters and how they fit into the general theme of my setting. That process informed me about what the setting required in order to make it sing. Using that new information, I moved back to macro. Political ideology among the characters I was creating, and how that fit into the wider scheme of my setting. Desires and wants and needs – that staple of any character sketching process – has a macro application as much as it does a micro.

The setting for Beyond the Wall is a dystopia centuries into the future and on other worlds as yet unexplored by man in 2014 – but why is it a dystopia? What makes it a dystopia? What makes living in the setting so unpleasant? Why would any system of government allow a dystopia to exist, given the risks of revolution and the cost in maintaining, usually by force, such a system? How, historically, have equivalent political systems operated? What have been their successes and failures, and how have those manifested (and why)?

What does daily life consist of? How do people exist from day to day? Technology, currency, utilities, crime and punishment, transport, a working life — all are issues to be resolved before a setting has muscles over the skeleton. It might be referred to as the infrastructure of the setting. Then you need the flesh and skin – the fine details which make things ultra-real. The way the characters interact with the setting, the changes the setting experiences as the events the characters are players in unfold – all add texture and colour to your creation. Micro and Macro intertwine.

History teaches us about humanity and the way it evolves and history can be a tremendous source of inspiration. For many story reasons, Beyond the Wall mirrors certain elements of the Roman Empire. I have drawn a great deal of inspiration from that period, but so have the characters in Beyond the Wall itself. For reasons which the books will explain, a great deal of my setting draws on historical fact. Twisting it, shaping it differently and interpreting is all part of the challenge of creating an epic setting. But it has to feel ‘real’.

Your viewpoint characters are complex and dark, particularly the navigator Natasha. How did you choose these characters for the story you wanted to tell — or did they choose the story?

A mixture of both. Stories are more compelling if we believe the person telling us that story, and we will only believe them if they are real to us. That means they must be as complex as we are. I have a story I want to tell, but how I tell that story comes from the characters who tell it for me. What they learn (their character arcs) shapes the way in which my themes come across. Also, the story almost always changes as they grow as characters. Lots of authors talk about characters who tell the story for them and are surprised when events in their story change before their eyes because the characters take over. In an epic story, that’s very difficult to permit, but weak characters who act irrationally cannot exist in a good story, so I am forced to listen to them as my story unfolds. Usually, what I thought was a good story arc is far better when the characters tell me where I should be going.

Jordi began life as an intriguing point of view to tell an epic story through, a naive fourteen-year-old from a rural backwater, but who he was going to become was largely a function of me living the story as it unfolded. Natasha came to me as I was walking in Pimlico and saw someone who looked vaguely similar to the way she looks in Defiance; I thought “she’d be fantastic on Jieshou.” With Weaver, I wanted an old, jaded cop, but someone who had voices in the back of his head which inferred a level of entrenched thinking – almost brainwashing – through years of having carte blanche to wield power with impunity. I asked myself, “how would such a man react to given situations?” and also, I wanted him to change his perceptions and attitudes as the story progressed, hence his disillusionment with the Magistratus. Also, I don’t want superhero characters. I want flawed, human characters who have to struggle internally and externally. An epic story is far more compelling if we can identify with the characters as they learn and change. Also, the main theme of Beyond the Wall – what is humanity and what are we permitted to do to protect it – can only come through via “ordinary” people. Of course, in a thrilling space opera, I need to have some reasonably powerful people fighting in these conflicts, but they don’t need to be super-soldiers. Internal conflicts are just as powerful as external ones.

Do you believe that humanity can break free from the shackles of Earth and head for the stars?

I think it’s inevitable. Too many scientific discoveries are being made, or close to being made, currently (LHC, Warp Travel and the Alcubierre Drive, Hypersonic and Scramjet propulsion, and so on); too much enthusiasm exists for space and what lies out there. We are naturally an exploratory species – our history shows us that – I think we’ll eventually realise that we are actually all the same, just a little different in our outlooks and skin colour. The vastness of space may well one day make our international conflicts seem rather petty. Alternatively, we might be forced into heading for the stars if we don’t do something about the problems our own planet faces. It’s a bit of a speculative fiction trope now, but it may well have some basis in reality for our future.

~~~

You can pre-order Defiance here: Amazon.com or Amazon UK.

Postscript: What it Means to Survive


Lucas Bale has just released a short story, also science fiction — and it’s another cracker. Here’s the blurb.

“McArthur’s World is a frozen planet which has been bled dry by mineral mining corporations for three decades. When there is nothing left but ice and snow, the last freighter lifts off carrying away every remaining human being. When it crashes in a wilderness no one has ever returned from, there are only two survivors: a miner who wants to get back to the children he has not seen for two years, and the woman who forced him to come to McArthur’s World in the first place.

“They think they’re alone, until the shrieks in the darkness come.”

Amazon links:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Find out more

Check out the author’s website here. You can follow him on Twitter @balespen.

Friday, 6 September 2013

An interview with Terry Abraham, mountain film-maker

This is part of a series of interviews with authors, photographers, film-makers, and other creative people who all have one thing in common: a connection with mountaineering culture.

Today it is my great pleasure to welcome Terry Abraham to my blog. Terry is the creative talent behind the highly acclaimed film
The Cairngorms in Winter with Chris Townsend - a triumph in the genre of mountain film. He's currently working on an ambitious new project, Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike which I would encourage all of my readers to consider backing on Indieogo. In this interview I ask Terry a little about his work and his plans for the future.

Terry Abraham Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike


Your last film, "The Cairngorms in Winter," has been hailed a great success by critics and viewers alike. Did the success of the film come as a surprise to you?
Absolutely. Such things are really rather subjective. I for one just produced something I've always wanted to see, and with Chris Townsend. Something less formal and more authentic. While I began to edit the film, I was really pleased with what was coming together but it dawned on me that the pace was somewhat slow when compared to most other videos and films of this subject. But I liked it. And I wanted the area to take centre stage. After all, that's why we all love the outdoors no? It's about the landscapes.

So, with that in mind myself and Chris have been truly taken aback by the public's and critic's response to the feature. It's not perfect by any means. But as a first attempt at a feature-length video for both of us, I think we did an OK job.

"The Cairngorms in Winter" is very different to most other mountain films I have seen. In a genre dominated by adrenaline and action, you and Chris managed to create a film where very little happens - and yet it was profoundly beautiful. Was this difference in approach a conscious decision, or did it evolve naturally?
Ha. Well, I touched upon your observation in the previous question. I think much of it stems from the fact that me and Chris just love the outdoors with a passion. For me it's arguably an obsession in truth. I feel compelled to explore and take it all in at whichever pace I feel at the time. I'd say it's the same for Chris too. So, without thinking about it, that's how the film came to be.

I'm not one to where my heart on my sleeve. I'm rather a 'man's man' kind of person. But it's been interesting to hear from people how they find the film 'poetic' and 'romantic' at times. I guess underneath all my layers as a person I am a shameless romantic when it comes to the outdoors. It just naturally flows out of me. But it's also how I see it. And it's inevitable it will show on video.

I'm just pleased I managed to achieve some of the vision and drive I wanted to put on screen. More so given the little time I spent up there.

So, no it wasn't planned at all. It just came naturally and upon reflection I think it's a mark of how me and Chris are as lovers of the outdoors. And in that respect I've been extremely lucky to have got on so well with Chris and consequently become good friends.

Tell us about your new project and how we can support it.
Well, I'm currently working on "Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike." The film is a brainchild of mine that's been brewing for at least 2 years and thankfully I'm now executing those ideas and dreams. I've always loved the Scafells and Lake District. It's my spiritual home if you like. It ticks so many personal boxes for me as a lover of the outdoors. And yet I've never seen a single TV show that showcases the area or Lakes for that matter, that shows it at it's most beautiful. Never.

Terry Abraham Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike


Consequently, I've always dreamed of producing a film about the Scafells seen through the course of the seasons, but also feature a story. The story of the area. Who lives there. Who works there. Who cares for it and who play on it and why. It's those threads I hope to tie into the film. Make it enlightening and engaging but moreover inspiring. I'm keen to bring the romance of the Lakes back to the fore. And there we go again...that word 'romance'. Damn! Some folks observations are right!

I'm still seeking funds for the film though due to some unforeseen circumstances. So, I've set up a fundraising page on Indiegogo where the public can contribute various amounts of money in exchange for gifts HERE.

It must be enormously challenging to produce a film set in the mountains, particularly with such a small team. Take us through the unique challenges and rewards of working on "The Cairngorms in Winter" and "Scafell Pike".
Team?! There's only me I'm afraid. I'm a one man show. I do all the sound, filming and editing. Heck, I'm no journo but even the interviews with people too. My main gripe is carrying all my camping gear, food and video equipment up onto the fells for days on end. It frustrates the hell out of me sometimes. Especially on stormy days, or when there's deep snow or just clag and persistent rain!

But I'll be the first to admit that even just an hour or two of the clouds parting and the sun poking through is enough to make my day. Literally. I don't film all the time. I'm only ever filming what I feel is worth capturing. So, the weather, the light and season all plays a part in that and as a result I selectively choose where I'm going and why and when.

With such positive reviews for your previous film, and an obviously enthusiastic core of fans, I guess the pressure must be on - do you thrive on pressure or does it daunt you a little?
I thrive on challenges and I suppose overcoming pressure is a challenge in itself. No, I don't feel pressure from expectations. More getting the work done in a given time frame and with a keen eye on the weather....then the pain of lugging a heavy pack out on the hills. But I'm more 'aware,' than ever the expectations folk have me on the Scafells film. If anything I'm trying to keep one step ahead and surprise them with what I'm doing, with whom and with the wee clips I put out online.

Of course, the proof will be in the pudding. And I've no idea how the film will turn out in truth. But so far, with the shoots I've done and having reviewed the footage I can honestly say that 'Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike' is in a different league to the Cairngorms one. I've put a lot of effort into this and of course given the above, it's kind of personal too. So, the love is there and I hope it shows on screen. It best do.

Terry Abraham Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike


Can you tell us anything about your future projects?
Nothing major. I'm riding the crest of a wave and seeing how long it lasts and where it will take me. I certainly never ever expected to be where I am now. Be it a few months ago, to a year ago. But I can say me and Chris Townsend will be working on another film where we hope to begin shooting next January.

You must have had some great days in the mountains during the filming process of both your most recent projects. Does any one day stand out from the others?
Too many to say in truth. Even some of the bad days I have fond memories of. I guess a recent highlight was a bivouac on Scafell Pike summit. The previous few days had been very productive and eventful. I had one battery explode in my pack due to the recent heatwave! But the evening proved to be rather miserable. I was thankful to be honest. I was truly exhausted and needed a good long sleep. Alas, I woke at 4am the following morning to the most wonderful cloud inversion as far as the eye could see to all points of the compass.

Only the Pike was above it all! Makes me grin now just typing and reminiscing that morning. And when the sun began to rise on the eastern horizon, it was a sight to behold. I really felt like I was in heaven that day, despite my focus being on the cameras.

Terry Abraham Life of a Mountain: Scafell Pike


When and where will "Scafell Pike" be released?
DVD May 2014. The premier will be on the IMAX screen at the Rheged Centre, Penrith, Cumbria. 7.30pm, Saturday 10th May 2014. Tickets on sale now.

Many thanks to Terry for the interview. On a personal note I'd like to add that "Scafell Pike" is well on the way towards hitting its crowdsourcing target on Indiegogo, but every little really does help so if you'd like to see this film succeed then please consider contributing - and spread the word!

To find out more, you can visit his blog here
Follow him on Twitter here
All photos (C) Terry Abraham - All Rights Reserved

Monday, 10 June 2013

An interview with John D Burns, outdoor blogger and Aleister Crowley playwright


This is part of a series of interviews with authors, photographers, film-makers, and other creative people who all have one thing in common: a connection with mountaineering culture.

Today's interview is with John D Burns, a man passionate about Britain's mountains who has the unusual distinction of being the creator of a one-man play about Aleister Crowley (who my readers will recognise as the villain of my own books!) He also writes on the subject of Britain's mountains and is currently working on a play about George Mallory and Everest.

Please introduce yourself. Who are you and what do you do?

I’ve lived in the Highlands for over thirty years. In that time I’ve done everything from ice climbing to a spell in mountain rescue. Over the last few years I’ve become increasingly interested in mountain bothies and generally enjoy spending time in the hills.

I’ve been writing for about ten years and it’s becoming an increasingly important part of my life. I’m not sure I’d describe myself as a “mountain writer,” but, as mountains are an important part of my life, it’s only natural that I wrote about them.

Over the years I’ve done everything from acting to stand-up comedy. I currently write my own blog and that’s been a really interesting way to get feedback on what you write.

Your one man play, "A Passion for Evil", depicts the maverick personality of Aleister Crowley. Tell us about Crowley and why he inspires you.

I first came across Aleister Crowley when he was featured in the log book of the Inverness Mountaineering club. There was a picture at the front of the book and someone had fixed the eyes so you could move them about. It was supposed to be a little bit of fun, I suppose. I asked around about Crowley, who lived not far from Inverness, and found out that very few people actually knew much about him. There was the usual stuff about him being a mad man who practised the occult and people knew he had done some climbing but everything was pretty vague.

I wanted to write and perform a one man play in the Edinburgh fringe and I began to look into Crowley’s background as a possible subject. The more I researched the more fascinating he became. I learnt that he had been one of the leading climbers of his generation taking part in two Himalayan expeditions in the early part of the 20th century and making ground breaking attempts on K2 and Kanchenjunga. Crowley had been climbing at the forefront of mountaineering although much of his achievements have been forgotten largely because of the more controversial aspects of his life story and also because Crowley refused to be part of the climbing establishment which was dominated by the Alpine Club at the time.

Crowley emerged as a complex character, courageous and fearless in his climbing yet with a dark side that led him to drug addiction and a personal life that was in turmoil. It was clear to me that here was someone whose life was always balanced on that knife edge between genius and lunacy. Crowley came across to me as someone who was certainly not insane and who was making a genuine exploration of the occult in order to find a new philosophy of life.

He was brave, brilliant, charismatic and yet fatally flawed … a perfect subject for a play.

How does it feel to put yourself into Crowley's boots and become the beast himself?

Writing a play, especially one that you intend to perform yourself, is a unique experience. On the opening night of the Fringe I found myself standing behind a curtain, listening to the audience file in, and knowing that in a few moments I would step out into the glare of the stage lights with only the words I wrote and my ability to perform them to get me through. It was terrifying and at the same time exhilarating. In the end we got some good reviews and the play was popular with audiences. Since then I’ve performed the show in different venues across the country and still perform the play at festivals.

Before I stepped on stage I used to allow some of the scenes that Crowley would have witnessed flow through my mind. I would picture myself far out in the Egyptian desert performing a magical ritual. At his house in the Highlands writing at his desk or high on a Himalayan peak. Sometimes, especially in rehearsals where there is no audience and only a handful of people present, I could sense something of a presence. I hope Uncle Al would have been happy with how I portrayed him.

Like Crowley, you are also a walker and mountaineer. Did these interests lead you to Crowley, or was it the other way round?

I didn’t realise until I was researching the play but Crowley and I have a number of ascents in common, most notably the Dente Blanche. That particular mountain has a very small summit, only the size of a table top, so he and I must have stepped on to the very same rocks at one point over half a century apart. I suppose that’s not very long when you consider just how short the history of mountaineering actually is. I think it was my interest in mountaineering that led me to Crowley, I probably would never have heard of him otherwise. He and I do have one other thing in common, we are both bad poets, unfortunately that’s a qualification shared by a lot of people. I think if Crowley could have been anything at all he would have chosen to be remembered as a great poet. Unfortunately his poetry was, for the most part, clumsy and dated in its style. I think he did have talent in that respect but, as is typical of the man, his arrogance would not allow him to listen to criticism and most of his poems sound like first drafts.

Describe your most memorable or enjoyable hill day.

In mountaineering I often find that memorable and enjoyable frequently describe different aspects of the sport. I was lucky enough to be in the Cairngorms recently, just after Easter. I’d walked in to Corrour bothy and spent the night there in glorious solitude. In the morning I was greeted by one of the most fantastic days I have ever seen in the Highlands. Bright Alpine style sunshine with iron hard névé that was a joy to walk and climb on. Walked out across an empty Cairngorms, over Cairn Toul, Angels Peak and Braeriach, in perfect conditions. It’s a long and committing walk and it had a little spice of risk to make it worth doing.

John on the summit of Braeriach
My most memorable days are perhaps different, one is being gripped out of my mind on a totally out of condition Green Gully one winter. Or lowering my friend John over a rock cliff in the dark with no belay. Or thousands of tonnes of rock and snow suddenly appearing above me on an ice climb in Canada as the whole face avalanched. I didn’t exactly enjoy those moments but they stick in the memory!

Can you tell us anything about your future projects?

I’m currently working on a one man play about George Mallory, Beyond Everest. The story of Mallory and Irvine, who both vanished on Everest, is one of the most gripping in mountaineering. The question of whether they got to the top will always be a mystery that fascinates everyone. The story of the conquest of Everest is unique; it can never be repeated now all the great challenges in mountaineering have been overcome. In his era Everest climbers were national heroes and the quest for the summit gripped the nation.

I wondered what would have happened if George Mallory had not died on the mountain. If he had returned what demons would have pursued him down from the heights and tortured him in his old age? I will be telling that story in a play in the 2014 Edinburgh fringe.

I’m also writing a personal account of my life in the hills. The View from my Boots is not only about my time in the mountains it’s about the relationship we all have with wild places. I think that the hills of Britain will be empty in twenty or thirty years and that our romance with high places will have become confined to only a handful of devotees. I want to ask questions about why that is happening and what we will lose when wilderness is lost to our lives.

Tell us how we can find out more about your work.

You can come and see A Passion for Evil at the Bram Stoker festival on the 24th of October 2013 at 7.30 http://www.bramstokerfilmfestival.com/a-passion-for-evil.php

Or visit my blog at http://johndburns.wordpress.com

Check out the Fringe program for Beyond Everest next year. I’m really looking forward to producing the show.

Thursday, 23 May 2013

New article published on UKHillwalking.com

Kellan MacInnes

I've had a new bit of journalism published on UKHillwalking.com:

"We've all heard of the Munros, the list of Scottish peaks over 3000 feet in height, but what about the Arthurs? In this interview Alex Roddie (username Only a Hill) talks to Edinburgh author Kellan MacInnes about his rediscovery of an alternative ticklist dating back to 1899. How many of the 20 Arthurs have you done?"


For other interviews with creative mountain folk, please see:

Monday, 18 March 2013

An interview with Jamie Hageman, mountain and landscape artist


Jamie Hageman mountain artist

This is part of a series of interviews with authors, photographers, film-makers, and other creative people who all have one thing in common: a connection with mountaineering culture.

Today I would like to welcome mountain artist Jamie Hageman to my blog. His extraordinary paintings are regularly exhibited, and thanks to his distinctive (and very realistic) style his work has attained widespread recognition and praise.

Please introduce yourself. Who are you and what do you do?
I'm a full-time mountain landscape painter living in the Scottish Highlands. I grew up in the flat lands of Lincolnshire, but through walking trips to North Wales from the age of ten, I slowly became obsessed with mountains - climbing them, reading about them, studying maps and of course drawing them. I moved up to Scotland in 2002 and can't imagine living anywhere else now.

You are both a climber and an artist--a not uncommon combination (when 'artist' is considered as a broad term). Why do you think art and mountains have such a strong association?
Painting the mountain landscape is a way of portraying the strong emotions I feel when I experience those great moments in the hills. People who have never seen such things might just be able to experience them viewing a painting, while others who have can identify with those moments through their own mountain travels. Climbing for me has always been about excitement and adventure. The phenomenon of encountering something terrifying but also beautiful has inspired artists for aeons. I'm continuing that focus, always aware of the possibility of the Sublime in the mountains, and putting myself in positions where I might experience it.
Jamie's stunning vision of the Northeast Face of Ben Nevis 
Do your paintings begin as an idea, or as a moment on the hill?
A real mix actually. In the case of my recent Ben Nevis Northeast Face painting (above), I'd seen the possibility of a great view on the map. Looking at the Northeast Buttress end on, it appears as a singular sharp peak rising straight up from Coire Leis. If you head up the opposite side of the valley a little way (on the bouldery flanks of Carn Mor Dearg) the buttress appears sharper and more spectacular, and the rest of the Ben Nevis cliffs come into view. The first time I saw it, I couldn't believe it! A very special view, and one which I've painted many times over the years, in all sorts of weather and conditions.

Other times I'm just out and about, and I'll notice something special. It might be a fleeting glimpse of a towering pinnacle through the mist, or an unexpected view of a familiar mountain. I suppose the key is to always be looking at your surroundings, and visualise how finished paintings might look.

Your paintings have a very distinctive style. How do you achieve such realism?
I've always painted in this style. It's what comes naturally. I love the detail and chaotic nature of the mountains, and I find that painting is a bit like building my own mountains from scratch - like model making. I can make them as realistic or fantastical as I like. Some features I'll make sure are accurate, almost like a topographical diagram showing climbing routes. Other features can be in a more impressionistic style, so long as they're still believable As for how I achieve that realism, It's down to lots and lots of patience. I'm never in a hurry to finish a painting, though some days the slow advancement is barely noticeable!

Describe your most memorable or enjoyable mountain day.
Probably my most memorable day was ten years ago alone in the Pyrenees in winter. It was my first foreign mountain trip, and I suppose I was a bit naive. I tried to climb the Grand Fache in dodgy snow conditions. Just getting to the foot of the mountain was a mission and took me a couple of days. I struggled to find a route up the northwest face which avoided the relentless wind, exposure and unconsolidated snow. I turned around when I felt out of my depth, but that experience has lived with me very clearly ever since.

A really enjoyable trip was in 2009, when I spent four of the coldest days of the winter on Skye with the tent. It was a proper adventure, and the mountains were pristine. I will never forget seeing Sgurr nan Gillean from the south for the first time. It's a fairytale cloud piercer from Sgurr Beag! My subsequent painting is one of my favourites.
The Central Cuillin by Jamie Hageman 
Which of your paintings challenged you the most?
I think the Ben Nevis Plateau painting challenged me the most. It's still the largest painting I've done (about one and a half metres wide I think). Just maneuvering to be able to paint it was difficult. I love painting on that scale, but I have to think about how practical it really is.

Can you tell us anything about your future projects?

I have so many ideas - I make lists of potential views, paintings, drawings, sketches and print ideas. They change frequently, but a couple that keep cropping up are the Lake District (I'd like to paint Blencathra, and maybe Scafell), and the Alps. I might try to get down to the Lakes before this snow disappears (has to be snowy), and I'm planning a trip to see Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn from hopefully some impressive but slightly less obvious angles. The Himalaya is still calling me, and I either need to tag along with an organised expedition, or arrange my own with a mate. Exciting to be thinking about these things - planning is half the fun! As for Scotland, the list seems to be never-ending.

Tell us about how we can find out more about your work.
My website is www.jamiehageman.com and I'm on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/#!/JamieHagemanMountainArtist

I'm taking part in the spring show at Resipole Studios across the Corran Ferry in Ardgour, so there'll be some new work appearing there. Right, back to my paints.

Thanks to Jamie for the interview!

All images (C) Jamie Hageman. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, 14 March 2013

An interview with Nick Livesey, mountain photographer


Nick Livesey, mountain photographer

This is part of a series of interviews with authors, photographers, film-makers, and other creative people who all have one thing in common: a connection with mountaineering culture.

Today's interview is with Nick Livesey, a talented mountain photographer who has created some stunning images over the last few years. Several of his photos have appeared in national magazines such as
TRAIL and TGO, and his name is a familiar sight in the Weekly Top Ten photos on UKC. Nick is also a prolific contributor to the UKHillwalking Route Cards, and one of the two Featured Authors in the routes section of UKH.

Please introduce yourself. Who are you and what do you do?
Hello, I’m Nick Livesey. On week days I’m a wage slave in a warehouse but in the evenings and at weekends I’m a semi-professional landscape photographer specialising in the upland areas of Great Britain.

How did you get into mountain photography?
Like most others I would imagine. I’d been hillwalking and climbing, summer and winter for years and had always taken a camera with me to record my days in the mountains. Then, about four years ago I had a rather special day on the Aonach Eagach and came back with some stunning photographs. After that day, the usual ‘snaps’ just weren’t good enough and I soon became obsessed with seeking out good light and interesting atmospheric conditions! My goal was the same then as it is now, which is to show others how special and rewarding our mountains can be. They’ve enriched my life immeasurably and my camera is the most effective tool I have for putting that message across.

What lengths are you willing to go to in order to get a really good shot?
If I think that there is a reasonable chance of getting a really special shot then I don’t mind enduring a considerable amount of discomfort. In summer I regularly get up at 2am and climb in the dark for first light on a summit. Winter is slightly more civilised but I‘m rarely off the hill before dark. I’m usually very tired, hungry, cold and sometimes wet through! There have been many false dawns but a bit of luck and a lot of planning usually serve me well and make up for the bad days. The main thing is to stay safe and coming from a mountaineering background is a real advantage in terms of getting shots that others might find difficult or dangerous to capture. Having said that, I’ve had my moments and no doubt there’ll be more to come!

Snowdon South Ridge by Nick Livesey
Snowdon South Ridge
Several of your images have been published, both online and in print. What makes a publishable mountain photograph in 2013?
That would depend on the publication really, but I don’t think tastes have changed that much, just fashions and technology. Mountaineering/climbing shots have always worked well without having to rely on good light; focusing more on a spectacular situation with the climber in a dynamic pose…colourful clothing helps too! For the more traditional mountain landscape, a dramatic sky, golden hour light and good composition is a killer combination, a well-placed figure can really add to the image too. In either case if it inspires the viewer and makes them want to ‘be there’ you’ve got a publishable image. It’s worth noting that editors usually want something very specific, so having a portfolio which covers a variety of areas in all four seasons is a real advantage.

Describe your most memorable or enjoyable mountain day.
Of course it would be almost impossible to choose just one, though most of my best days have been in winter and have involved temperature inversions! But just in case my other half is reading this, one that I’ll never forget is a day we spent climbing on the Napes, topping out above a sea cloud just in time to enjoy a wonderful sunset. It felt like we were the only two people on the planet, let alone Gable, which we probably were!

What advice would you give to mountaineers hoping to break into mountain photography?
In my experience it’s possible to get great shots by accident while you’re out with your mates just having a day on the hill…we’ve all done it. However, if you want to consistently capture strong images then photography has to take priority over having a jolly day out. Of course if you enjoy going into the hills on your own (as I do) then you can have the best of both worlds. Most importantly, feel something for your subject and have the desire to communicate that feeling to others. Technique can be learnt but without passion your photography will lack the most essential ingredient.

Nantlle Ridge by Nick Livesey
The Nantlle Ridge

What are you working on at the moment?
I’m currently working with ‘Visit Peak District’ as an ODPP (Official Destination Photography Partner) as well as running one to one and small group workshops in The Peak and Snowdonia. I’m looking forward to getting more images published and should be appearing in Trail and TGO magazines in the next couple of months. As always, I’m getting out at every available opportunity to hone my photographic skills, enjoy the mountains and capture them at their ravishing best!

Tell us where we can find out more about your work.
My Flickr account is where you’ll find my latest work and my official website has a selection of images plus full details of prints and workshops.

Many thanks to Nick for this interview!

All images (C) Nick Livesey. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, 11 March 2013

An interview with Gordon Stainforth, author of FIVA

Gordon Stainforth
Photo from Gordon's site: http://goo.gl/HQYyT
This is the first of a series of interviews with authors, photographers, film-makers, and other creative people who all have one thing in common: a connection with mountaineering culture.

Tonight's interview is with Gordon Stainforth, award-winning author of FIVA: An Adventure That Went Wrong which won the Best Book of Mountain and Wilderness Literature at the Banff Mountain Book Festival in 2012. FIVA is a true story of mountain disaster set in Norway, 1969, and is a direct account of the author's own harrowing experience as a young man. Read my review of this excellent book here.

Gordon has also written four highly acclaimed mountain landscape books and has worked extensively in the film industry.


Please introduce yourself. Who are you and what do you do?
I am now a full-time writer (which also means doing a lot of promotional work, presentations, and research, outside of any actual writing.) I am no longer doing any professional photographic work, though I still do some book design and Photoshop work. In the little spare time I get I do a lot of reading, hillwalking and talking ... and visit the occasional pub ... I stopped rock climbing in 2007.

What inspired you to start writing?
I have been writing ever since the age of eight, when my twin brother and I started writing our first adventure stories - we actually made them into little books, which I still have - based almost entirely on Biggles :) Of course a lot of academic writing followed at school and university, but once I was at film school I was struggling with creative writing again. I wrote a science fiction novel in 1986-87 after I left the film industry, and this has been revised about once a decade ever since ... at last I have a publisher (it's going to start as an ebook), and needless to say with the amount of work put into it it's about ten times better than my original version. I have exactly six other book projects at the moment that I would love to do, three already in quite an advanced stage of preparation.

Image from
http://goo.gl/RcU7x
Your true story of mountain disaster, FIVA, has been widely acclaimed. I was impressed by the immediacy and honesty of the writing. How did you achieve this?
How I succeeded with Fiva was really by waiting so long before attempting to write it. I don't think I could have done it nearly as well even a decade ago because I have learned so much over the years about writing, particularly dramatic writing. (In 2003 I wrote a screenplay on the highwayman Turpin, and although it never got made as a film, I probably learned more about story telling from that than anything I've ever done. I had lots of screenplay and film treatment failures in my 20s.) The key to all writing is to find the right voice, style and tone for the particular story. Actually, that applies to non-fiction too. Every book needs its entirely unique tone, in my view - and until you've got that right, you're just wasting your time putting pen to paper (fingers to keyboard). Once I'd found the right tone for Fiva, it went really smoothly.

You have been writing about mountains and mountaineering for many years. Which of your books gave you the most pleasure to write?
Fiva by far. The other books involved a huge amount of very hard physical work with the photography, and were very satisfying in a completely different way, particularly Eyes to the Hills and The Cuillin. In the film industry I got a huge amount of satisfaction from editing and laying the music tracks for Kubrick's The Shining. A lot of the choices of music were mine.

How important is photography to your work?
Photography is not important at all to me now. I am very satisfied with the books i've done, but it's desperately hard, time-consuming work, and I am much more interested purely in ideas and words now. But I still think very much as a film maker, and am having a great time working with an artist who's doing the illustrations for my forthcoming sci-fi novel. I am able to sketch my ideas out for her quite effectively. A bit like storyboarding for a movie. I love it.

Describe your most memorable or enjoyable mountain day.
I had so many memorable mountain days. Of course those three days on the Fiva Route in 1969 were certainly the most intense, but I had many others in the Alps (including two other epics on Piz Palu and the Aiguille du Peigne with John Syrett) and the Cuillin. And the first days of rock climbing in Snowdonia from 1968-70 are full of rich memories. Some of this will be in my autobiography ...

What advice would you give to new writers?
Read and read and read; and think and write, think and write, think and write. Always think a lot first, before you put pen to paper. (I like to work to a pre-planned structure, i.e work out the shape or story first ... it can always change.) Then let it flow as fast as possible - rhythm and euphony is so important. Leave all polishing to later. Then stand back from it, then edit it, stand back from it, then edit, stand back from it, then edit. Overall be intensely self-critical, never satisfied with second best, and never give up. There is so much truth in that old adage of one per cent inspiration and ninety-nine per cent perspiration. A lot of that perspiration will be preparation.

What are you working on at the moment?
Sci-fi novel, in very final stages. Then I have a biography of my great uncle (who broke the world speed record) to write. That's an amazing story, because of the way his private life - which very few people know about - became entangled with his flying career and ultimately led to his destruction. It really is a fantastic story.

Who has influenced you the most?
I was very fortunate to work with and talk to some of the greatest creative people in the film industry, such as Stanley Kubrick, Ridley Scott, and Ronald Harwood - but Kubrick was by far my greatest influence. We got on very well, because we actually had the same kind of very focused way of working, and I think similar interests.


Tell us how we can find out more about your work.
Everything about my work can be found on my website, www.gordonstainforth.co.uk - though I'm being completely tight-lipped about my sci-fi book, because it's going out under a pseudonym.

Many thanks to Gordon Stainforth for the interview!