In early
1999, our son decided he would like to be a writer. Always keen to
encourage our children in their endeavours, we paid for him to enrol
on a correspondence course for creative writing. At the same time, I
agreed to come along with him to the local Writers' Circle, in
Alsager. Everything really started from there. 2017 is the result after a long period of gestation.
My intention
had been to only go along for the first couple of meetings, until my
son had settled in. As Obi Wan Kenobi might have put it, writing has
always been strong in my family. My uncle, for many years, had run
the Writers Circle, in Alsager, but he was quite old by this
time, and had ceased activity. His grandfather, my great
grandfather, was Swedish. He had come to this country, learned
Pitman shorthand, and became a journalist, also living in Dublin for
some time, where my grandmother was born. That literary bent seems
to have carried through into most of my mother's siblings, several of
whom have written poetry and short stories, and my mother has written
a lengthy auto-biography. When I first went to senior school, I was
frequently writing stories, and gathered an audience, in the
playground, for their recital. In part, it was a way of avoiding
getting beaten up by fourth formers; a bit like Scheherazade, and The
Arabian Nights. I grew up with a plethora of literature in the
house that had been handed down, and my wife and I carried that
forward with our own children.
My son was
able to read at a ridiculously early age, and to spell the most
complex of words by the time he was five, so, given the background, I
was not at all surprised at his interest in becoming a writer. We
turned up to the “Little Tin Hut”, in
Alsager, where the Writer's
Circle met, and which gave its
name to a series of anthologies of writings by members of the circle,
over the years. The numbers in attendance were rather diminished,
but everyone was very friendly. Existing members read pieces that
had been prepared, which we discussed, and an exercise was set out
for the meeting the next week. It was a newspaper cartoon, which we
had to use as the basis for a short story or poem.
By
the time I left the meeting, I already had the outline of a story in
my head. It took me about an hour, a day or so later, to write the
story, which I thought I might as well offer for consideration. It
received universal acclaim with a number of people asking if I was a
copy writer or some other form of professional writer, and so I was
hooked. In coming months, my son, who had also written several
pieces that were very well received, and some of which were included
in an anthology, became too busy with his university studies, before
going to study, for several months, in the US, and so dropped out of
the circle.
Over the next, few months, I felt a bit like being back at school again. A series of short stories blossomed in my imagination that I tested out on work colleagues, before submitting to the circle that week. After a while, people at work began to ask me if I had a new story for them to read.
Over the next, few months, I felt a bit like being back at school again. A series of short stories blossomed in my imagination that I tested out on work colleagues, before submitting to the circle that week. After a while, people at work began to ask me if I had a new story for them to read.
In
September 1999, we had gone on holiday to France. We were staying in
a 16th
century farmhouse in the Dordoigne. One evening, I picked up a
paperback from their library, and began to skim through it. It was
about a British mercenary who went to South Africa to organise a
coup. “I could write something better than this”,
I thought to myself. Given my experience of being a member of a
revolutionary group, for thirteen years, and my knowledge of politics
and economics, I was also confident that I could write something more
realistic. When I was fifteen, I'd started to write a spy novel, but
never completed it, because, well, when you are fifteen, other
interests are more pressing on your time. But, now, the idea of an
action novel, grounded in revolutionary politics seemed to me an
exciting project.
Over
the next few weeks, I began to put together the skeleton of the
novel. But, other things fell into the mix. Towards the end of
1999, stock markets were going crazy. I remember thinking at the
time, “this can't go on, and is going to end badly.”
For several years, as
our children had grown
beyond the stage of having toys for Christmas, we had spent the
holiday in the Canary Islands. We prided ourselves on being able to
trawl the technology of the time, Ceefax, to find great bargains. As
it turned out, because of the millennium, that had seemed an
impossible challenge that year. The cheapest we had found was a
fortnight for £3,000, about six times what we would normally have
paid. We'd given up the idea, but as Christmas approached, we
thought we would give it one last go. We found a holiday for two
weeks in Gran Canaria, two separate studio apartments for a total
price of £600. “Don't tell anybody what we paid, when
we get there, I suggested.”
One
of my regular habits, when on holiday, was to read the FT,
and in one of the Weekend Editions,
there was a short story, about hackers causing a collapse of stock
markets, using the Millennium Bug,
as cover for their activities. I was never convinced by all of the
scare stories about the Millennium Bug.
In fact, we were due to fly back home on January 1st
2000. I remember, watching CNBC in the days up to New Year, and the
continual leaps higher of the stock markets, as the NASDAQ soared
past 5,000. On New Year's Eve, 1999, we stood out and watched from
the elevated position of our hotel, as fireworks exploded into the
night sky across the resort. By that time the novel was formed in my
head.
Without
giving too much away, because obviously I want people to buy the
novel, the story involves a group of revolutionaries hacking
financial markets, to cause a financial crash, as well as providing
themselves with extensive finances with which to build an
international revolutionary organisation, and thereby to spark a
revolutionary situation. By March 2000, my expectation that the
bubble in financial markets, particularly of technology shares, would
burst, had been born out, as a market crash took the NASDAQ down by
75%.
As
my intention was to weave the story into a series of actual events,
the 2000 stock market crash, together with the possibility that it
would lead to a recession, led me to have to revise some of the
existing structure of the novel. In fact, that was useful, because
it meant that I could also develop a number of other existing, real
life events into themes that could play into the overall story line.
So, for example, the fall in the oil price, and its subsequent sharp
rise, was a perfect opportunity to use as an example of market
manipulation; the growing anti-capitalist movement and demonstrations
across the globe, fed into the narrative of an international
organisation, in the background co-ordinating events; the known
manipulation of the gold market by governments to save the banks, was
another theme that lent itself to inclusion in a series of
conspiracies.
In
fact, I've often wondered what some of the other members at the
writers circle, who graciously read the novel, and offered their
support and suggestions, might have thought, in recent years, as many
of the ideas contained in it, have actually played out. For more
than a year, I was unable to work on the book, because of suffering
with depression, but by the middle of 2002, I had the first drafts
completed. In some ways, the delay had been useful, because, by that
time, the attacks of 9/11 had happened, and, given the nature of the
book, it would have been impossible not to have included them. In
addition, by that time it was obvious that the “War on
Terror” was building to an
inevitable attack on Iraq.
It
was also clear to me, at that time, that a financial market bubble
was again being inflated, and that it would mean yet another
financial crisis. So, I was led into another re-write, to
accommodate these actual events, and the potential events I now saw
as flowing inevitably from them, over the next few years, and which
could be integrated into the story being woven around them. I set
the date for the financial crash as May 2009, which was then still
six years away, and began to construct the story around that
timescale. Further drafts of the story followed, and were handed
over to my friends in the Writers Circle,
who provided extensive criticisms and suggestions, for me, before I
completed, what was then, I thought the final draft.
In
fact, a number of events prevented me from publishing the book at
that time, and when the financial meltdown of 2008 occurred, not only
did it confirm the ideas I had been developing for some time, but it
meant I had a choice of including it into the story, as part of the
predicted deliberate collapsing of the markets, or else of working
this too into a longer series of events. I decided on the latter,
which meant a further re-write, but again, it proved beneficial,
because it gave me the opportunity to include a wider range of events
and scenarios not originally dealt with; it meant I had time for
further research on actual events, and places, so as to make the
texture of the novel richer.
The
further complication of intending to move to Spain in 2010, and then
of being homeless for several weeks, delayed further work on the
novel for some time. But again, the delay was useful to be able to
connect the storyline to the anniversary of the 1917 revolution. The rise of Syriza, Podemos, of Corbynism, of Bernie Sanders in
the US, of the Left Bloc in Portugal are all developments
presaged in the first drafts of the novel, back in the early 2000's.
The volatile movements in the price of oil and other commodities, the
huge rise in the price of gold, and its subsequent decline, the stock
market crashes of 2000 and 2008, were all envisaged in the early
drafts, and I think attest to one of my original ambitions, which was
to utilise my understanding of finance and politics to create a story
that is credible and yet, as a political thriller, and action
adventure, necessarily also incredible and requiring the reader to
suspend disbelief.
So,
I wait now to see whether the further predictions of the book
materialise. After all, 2017 is nearly upon us.
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