Sunday, December 22, 2013

The Mechanical Gorilla

The Mechanical Gorilla
Here is a new novelette packed with Fortean themes. It's got cryptozoology (ghostly-seeming apemen in the woods), sinister government secrets (Cold War bunkers and Men in Black) and a gateway to a parallel universe. It even name-drops the one-and-only Nick Redfern!I used to write quite a lot of fiction, until it dawned on me there is a lot less demand for it than there is for non-fiction. So these days I generally refrain from writing fiction - unless, that is, I'm presented with a challenge I just can't resist. That's what happened a few years ago with "The Case of the Invisible College and Other Mysteries" (the challenge in that case being to come up with a cross between Sherlock Holmes and Inspector Morse)... and it happened again at the end of last year.In this case the source of the challenge was Peni Griffin's excellent Idea Garage Sale blog. Anyone who is interested in creative writing and has never come across Peni's blog really ought to check it out. It's exactly what the title says... or perhaps not exactly, since "garage sale" suggests you have to pay for the ideas - in fact they're free with no strings attached! Last November, Peni did a couple of posts based on news stories she'd seen in "Fortean Times" magazine - The Mechanical Gorilla and Roadside Bigfoot. It struck me these could easily be two scenes from the same story - my initial thoughts on the subject can be seen in the comments to the "Roadside Bigfoot" post.Once I'd started thinking about it, I realized I could merge in various other ideas that were at the back of my mind - Nick Redfern's theories about the nature of British "apeman" sightings, and my fascination with Cold War politics and secret underground installations. Mix in some convincing-sounding technobabble and an old-fashioned beginning-middle-end plot, and "The Mechanical Gorilla" was the result!I've mentioned before that I'm a big fan of the wacky world of A. E. van Vogt, one of the most popular science fiction authors of the 1940s. It's often said that van Vogt wrote his stories in scenes of 800 to 1000 words, each of them introducing a new and totally unexpected sci-fi twist. I'm not convinced van Vogt really used this technique as rigorously as some people claim... but I've always wanted to try my hand at it! I finally got a chance to do just that in this story - ten short chapters of a thousand words each. I won't spoil things by giving away the twist introduced in each chapter, but you can get a flavour of things from the (deliberately pulp-style) chapter headings:1. On The Trail of the Apemen2. Cryptic Visitors3. Encounter in the Woods4. A Transdimensional Portal5. Idol of the Apemen6. The Soviet Connection7. Secrets of the Cold War8. Astounding Revelations9. Prisoners of the Apemen10. The Mechanical Gorilla "The Mechanical Gorilla" is currently available in Kindle format from Amazon.com" and Amazon.co.uk, and should eventually be available on iTunes and Nook as well (ISBN 978-1-291-29955-7). The "cover image" at the top of this post is the first one I produced, which I thought was very artistic. However it was rejected by the Kindle system because the contrast was too low! The final version (seen on the Amazon site) is more garish, although it does work better at thumbnail size. The Japanese text in the image is supposed to read gorira robotsu", which is the closest I could get to "gorilla robot"... but with my luck it probably means something rude!