Ben Aaronovitch's Blog, page 30
October 28, 2012
The BBC 6 O'Clock News Regional Bias report: Month 2

Another month(1) has gone by and while I think it is far too early to make conclusions there is little sign of a London-centric bias so far. On the contrary Scotland, Wales and North-West have dominated.
Starting with the raw figures in minutes of coverage per region/nation.
September October Total North West 42.66 18.76 61.42 Wales 14.55 24.46 39.01 London 18.31 18.99 37.30 Scotland 13.59 21.35 34.94 South-East 24.07 9.91 33.98 Yorkshire + 19.76 11.08 30.84 South-West 5.60 22.88 28.48 East 3.43 13.81 17.24 West Midlands 0.92 10.57 11.49 Northern Ireland 7.37 2.88 10.25 North East 6.55 - 6.55 East Midlands 1.97 1.72 3.69
London comes in 3rd behind the North-West and Wales, which has had a particularly news worthy month what with mad hit and run drivers etc. If we then adjust for population size we find London dropping down the chart to 7th place behind the South-West.
September October Total Wales 4.75 7.98 12.73 North West 6.05 2.66 8.71 Scotland 2.59 4.06 6.65 Yorkshire + 3.74 2.10 5.84 Northern Ireland 4.07 1.59 5.66 South-West 1.06 4.33 5.38 London 2.24 2.32 4.56 South-East 2.79 1.15 3.94 East 0.59 2.36 2.95 North East 2.52 - 2.52 West Midlands 0.16 1.89 2.05 East Midlands 0.43 0.38 0.81
One thing is indisputable though there are regions of the UK that seem oddly neglected by the news media it just so happens it's neither Scotland, Wales, the North-West or Yorkshire.
Still, given the difference one good solid sex scandal or murder can make to a region, it's far too early to draw any conclusions from this data.
(1) I'm doing this, for my convenience, in 4 week blocks. At some point it will get horribly out of sync but I'll worry about that when I get there.
Published on October 28, 2012 23:00
October 25, 2012
At Last The Truth! They Wrote What?
Readers often ask me whether such and such a book was an influence or not. Occasionally people can be quite insistent that obviously such and such a book was obviously an influence and can provide close textual analysis to back up their claim.
For my last blog about the influences on Rivers of London I thought I'd talk about those books that would have been an influence if only I'd read them before I wrote it.


Neil Gaiman is one of the writers most frequently attributed to me as an influence. Alas I'd caught about ten minutes of the original TV series back in the 1980s but I've never read the book. Like alot of books on this list I read Anansi Boys a while after I'd started writing Rivers of London after someone pointed out, in those fatal words - that's a bit like what your book sounds like innit?
Kraken
I had thought China Mieville had struck out for the more lucrative shores of literary fiction and the good opinion of the broadsheets but he surprised me by producing his own London based mystery - the bastard.


I was about halfway through the first draft of ROL when Mike Shevden came strolling into the Covent Garden branch of Waterstones, where I worked, bold as brass and slapped an ARC of 61 Nails down in front of me. 'Get a load of my new book,' he said. 'It's an urban fantasy set in Covent Garden and draws heavily, and rather brilliantly if I say so myself, on the mythology of London especially stuff you've never heard of because your research mojo is just that pathetic - I pity the poor sod that tries to follow in my footsteps for he shall be subject to much ridicule.'(1)
The Sweet Scent of Blood
I mean you wait ages for an urban fantasy centred around Covent Garden and then two come along at the same time. Suzanne McLeod was another of those reminders that however original you think you are somebody else has already arrived and grabbed all falafel off the buffet table. Although in Suzanne's case she ran off with the kitchen sink as well.


Fortunately the Bryant and May books didn't register with me until after I'd finished the manuscript otherwise it might have been all over for yours truly's literary career.
Christopher Fowler's Roofworld was an important influence on Rivers of London but while I'd gone onto read Rune, his next book, I'd sort of lost track of him. I remember shelving the Bryant and May books and thinking I should get round to reading them but there's so many books, so little time. We share a similar obsession with the nooks, crannies and secrets of London but luckily a different approach to writing about them. well different enough anyway.
Street Magic
Obviously at some point in time, presumably a couple of years prior to me working in a bookshop, a memo had gone out suggesting that what the world needed were fantasy police procedurals set in London. Caitlin Kittredge hearkened to this call and produced the Black London series in order to throw me deep into a depression. Fortunately, just as with Bryant and May and Felix Castor, London is a diverse enough city for me to get away with being Johnny come lately.


I heard about Phil Rickman's rural fantasy/mysteries when his agent rejected me and cited him as the reason. They said that they already had their supernatural mystery writer, thank you very much, and wouldn't be needing another. I immediately rushed over to the relevant shelf in my crime section and plucked the lone Phil Rickman that had been languishing there and read it. Then I ordered his back catalogue - they sold quite nicely as well.
The Atrocity Archive
This really would have been a seriously major influence had only I had heard of it in time. Charles Stross' fantastic mixture of office comedy, spy thriller and Lovecraftian horror is how I like to spend my afternoons.
(1) He didn't really say any of this because he is, in fact, a very nice gent but that's how it sounded to me.
Published on October 25, 2012 22:00
October 24, 2012
Coming Up!
One of the great things about success is I now get to go to places I've never been before.
Portsmouth Book Fest
Tuesday 30th October
Orbit Books and Gollancz present: Urban Fantasy and the City Setting
What? A fourway slugfest between Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Ben Aaronovitch, Kate Griffin and Benedict Jacka.
Where? The Menuhin Theatre
3rd Floor
Portsmouth Central Library
Guildhall Square
Portsmouth
PO1 2DX
7.00pm. Tickets: £5
Why? Because London is only big enough for one urban fantasy series. Four writers enter only one leaves!

Tuesday 30th October
Orbit Books and Gollancz present: Urban Fantasy and the City Setting
What? A fourway slugfest between Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Ben Aaronovitch, Kate Griffin and Benedict Jacka.
Where? The Menuhin Theatre
3rd Floor
Portsmouth Central Library
Guildhall Square
Portsmouth
PO1 2DX
7.00pm. Tickets: £5
Why? Because London is only big enough for one urban fantasy series. Four writers enter only one leaves!
Published on October 24, 2012 04:59
October 23, 2012
Currently Reading: Jack Glass

Blurb: Jack Glass is the murderer. We know this from the start. Yet as this extraordinary novel tells the story of three murders committed by Glass the reader will be surprised to find out that it was Glass who was the killer and how he did it. And by the end of the book our sympathies for the killer are fully engaged.
Riffing on the tropes of crime fiction (the country house murder, the locked room mystery) and imbued with the feel of golden age SF, JACK GLASS is another bravura performance from Roberts. Whatever games he plays with the genre, whatever questions he asks of the reader, Roberts never loses sight of the need to entertain. JACK GLASS has some wonderfully gruesome moments, is built around three gripping HowDunnits and comes with liberal doses of sly humour.
Roberts invites us to have fun and tricks us into thinking about both crime and SF via a beautifully structured novel set in a society whose depiction challenges notions of crime, punishment, power and freedom. It is an extraordinary novel.
I'm looking forward to this one.
Published on October 23, 2012 22:00
October 16, 2012
Currently Reading: Sparks

Blurb: When Paul Sparks is dumped by Alison, he decides to use a gateway into a million parallel universes to look for a new girlfriend - an Alison who won't dump him. It's a simple plan - he's a simple man - except for the forces of the Random, a man called Joseph Kaye, and a cockroach that doesn't exist. Sci-fi comedy.
I know David Quantick primarily as the creator of the Blaggers Guide To... on the radio so when I heard he had a book I rushed out and downloaded it onto my kindle(1).
(1) Okay so I rushed out in a metaphorical sense.
Published on October 16, 2012 22:00
October 14, 2012
The D-Word: delinking exercise.


Up until recently I did this as part of my weight loss programme. The theory is sound, eat LESS calories, burn MORE calories LOSE more weight.
The trouble with this approach is that the moment you have a CCE (Catastrophic Cake Encounter) and gain weight you lose all incentive to continue to exercise. 'What's the point of dragging yourself round the circuit if you remain the same porky bastard as before?'
The answer, according to the New Scientist, is that exercise is good for you regardless of whether you lose weight or not. In fact a fit fat person (not an oxymoron apparently) is better off than an unfit thin person - take that you skinny wretch!
But how can this be? I hear you cry. What follows is a summery of the summery of the research as outlined in New Scientist 25th August 2012 page 39.

The reasons, the detail is in the article, is because exercise; flushes all manner of shit out of your system reducing the risk of heart attacks by 30-50%. It alters the structure of fatty triglyceride particles (bad for you) making it easier for the body to break them down. Lowers the chance of developing type 2 diabetes by 58% (by helping the body deal with glucose in various ways) and helps burn off excess sugar.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exercise is good for you - we get it - so what?
You have to de-link exercise from weight loss. The exercise is doing you a ton of good regardless of whether you shed a single kilo or not. Thus diet failure (and all diets like all political careers end in failure) is not an excuse to stop exercising. So now when I'm struggling up Kite Hill I no longer tell myself that I'm doing it to lose weight I tell myself I'm doing it so I can outlive those thin bastards who sit in front of the TV all day.
Two and half hours a week - please, I spent more time on twitter over the last two days than that.
Published on October 14, 2012 22:00
October 12, 2012
Now Available in Brazilian Portuguese

The series is being called Enigma's of London and the first book is Spirits of the Thames (I think).
Blurb: E se a magia fosse real? E mais: e se ela fosse controlada por um departamento da polícia e utilizada para proteger as pessoas de espíritos mal intencionados e entidades maléficas?
Após descobrir que a única testemunha de um crime é na verdade um fantasma, Peter Grant torna-se aprendiz do enigmático inspetor Thomas Nightingale e logo aprende a controlar magias e feitiços que o ajudarão a resolver uma série de crimes.
Através dos olhos cínicos e sarcásticos do detetive recém-assumido, somos introduzidos aos seres sobrenaturais que habitam as partes soturnas da cidade de Londres, assim como às regras do submundo de trolls que vivem embaixo de pontes, famílias de vampiros, ninfas dos rios e guardiões do Tâmisa.
Com uma história repleta de mistério e humor, Espírito do Tâmisa é uma fantasia urbana em que o leitor ficará preso até o último minuto.
Gostaram? Strangely the Diana Gabaldon quote seems to have cross fertislised with the iO9 quote from the American edition - not that I'm complaining you understand.
Published on October 12, 2012 02:25
October 4, 2012
German Covers

I love these German covers, I particularly like the way this one uses an old non-schematic map of the Underground.
Published on October 04, 2012 22:00
My Ego Has Exploded (again)!
Published on October 04, 2012 06:06
October 3, 2012
Currently Reading: Brighton Belle

Published on October 03, 2012 01:36