Announcing my first zine!

EDIT: PREORDER LINKS!! Click here for UK shipping, and here for international shipping!

I’d planned to use this Wednesday’s post to whinge about the editing process for my first science-fiction book, which is going to take much longer than expected. BUT that’s never a good look for any author, much less a debut one. So instead, let me tell you about the zine I’m putting out for Saturnalia this year!

Available for preorder is Saturn’s Cove, a modest zine with a few poems I’ve written about the Saturnine deity paired with striking images. The first 72 copies will be sigilised with the name of a different spirit under the deity, and the first 100 copies will also be numbered and signed.

Saturn’s Cove can be YOURS in time for Saturnalia this December, for the low price of £7 within the UK and £10 outside (shipping included). My PayPal address is sonyablanck at gmail dot com, and don’t forget to email me your mailing address too!

Alternatively, you could always mosey over to my Patreon and support my work! For a trifling £10/month, I will just send you zines in the post without your even having to ask. 😉

saturn’s cove

in the cove of the dead man
is a wall of earth, lashed by the sea,
where can be read the geologic history
of the soil, banded in layers of colour:
     brown
     tawny gold
     powdered chalk
     ash
     ribbons of red rust
     and a demarcation line of black, below which
the bedrock is slippery grey, weathered
by moons and moons, years and years,
of high tide.

the rocks between wall and sea—
boulder to rubble—
are also banded, speaking the same ancient story,
and as they approach the shore
they are covered over, all, by a slippery sea-green algae
that beckons: come closer,
here, and let the sea claim you.

(in my mind the ghostly hum
of mermaids, deep under the waves,
drifts in from far away.)

near a stream dripping from a hole in the cliff-face
as it makes its inexorable return to the ocean,
an old tree, roots exposed, juts skyward
out of the rock. is it dead?
its bare wood thrums with invisible power,
stagnant, like the shallow tidal pools below it,
and at its base, adorned with dead branches on which
inscrutable symbols are carved, is a flat, square stone,
an altar, unhewn, to the dead man.

(and i trespass, climbing into places i know
i shouldn’t go,
i trespass, because it’s all i know to do,
i trespass, because he calls me
and i, having no offering for him,
can only give him myself.)

beyond the tree, overgrown with dying ferns,
is a forking path.
     to the left a clearing where nature has reclaimed
a tent pitch, where i feel the resonance
of a great evil—who died here?
     to the right a rubbish tip,
     and up the centre path, blocked
up with dead branches deliberately placed, and a weathered wooden plaque
which resembles a tombstone,
a clearing, in which is pitched
a tent of meeting, where i dare not go.

for what would i ask
of the dead man?

back at the shore, pocket heavy with dull flints,
i find a flaked slab of shale, blue-grey
and carved by water, a grave marker
for a marooned mermaid, a beached venus,
and my eyes scan the rosy pale horizon
     for sirens riding the crests of waves
     for dragon heads peeping out of seafoam
     for the dead man’s bride, adorned
with strings of pearls.

Detective Chief Constable of Unauthorised Cycling

George Grimley awoke at half past seven in the morning, a custom he had maintained even three years into his retirement. He sat up straight-backed, swung his legs over the end of his neatly-made double bed, and inserted his feet firmly into his slippers (he had only recently begun to dress after breakfast, rather than before).

He made his way into the kitchen of the Iffley bungalow he shared with his thin-lipped wife Marjory, whom he found bent over the cooker, making her usual breakfast of over-salty bacon and underseasoned scrambled eggs. He noted with dismay that she had once again insisted on not making toast, her ketogenic eating habits beginning to infect him as well. (‘Serves you right,’ she would say matter-of-factly if he protested, ‘your paunch is quite a bit bigger than mine!’) The stringy curls of her brittle blonde hair spilled over the top of the clip pinned to the back of her head.

‘Good morning, George,’ she said in her brusque, tight voice without affording so much as a smile. ‘Are you on your rounds today?’

‘I am never off-duty, dear.’ He sat down at the kitchen table expectantly, and a plate of bacon and eggs – without toast – was thumped down before him.

Marjory breathed out abruptly. ‘Well you can go to Westgate for me then, my M&S order’s come in.’

At this, George stoically ate his breakfast, got up, and went to get dressed. As he left the kitchen he said over his shoulder, ‘Have the shopping trolley ready by the door.’

A short while later, wheeling the trolley behind him on the way to catch the number 3 bus, he spotted his first offender just in front of him, lazily meandering onto the pavement to avoid the morning rush hour traffic towards the city centre. George gripped the trolley tighter and marched determinedly forward. When he was just behind the fiend, he shouted, ‘No cycling on the pavement!

The cyclist, a grim-faced morning commuter, gave a start and wobbled aside with cowed fear. He had not known that the self-appointed Detective Chief Constable of Unauthorised Cycling was near.

George scowled out the window of the bus – he and his trolley had taken one of the folding chairs, glaring so ferociously at a mother bringing her toddler to nursery that she was forced to fold her pushchair – counting the number of cyclists which passed beside him on the pedestrian pavement. At one point, the bus slowed in traffic, he had locked eyes with a timid wisp of a girl on her bike (no doubt a student, he sneered to himself), who had offered him an apologetic half-smile. He knocked hard on the window, wagged his finger reprovingly, and shouted ‘NO!‘ so loudly that he drew disapproving looks from his fellow bus commuters.

Unbelievably, the situation worsened once he got off the bus at Westgate. Making his way towards the Marks and Spencers, he crossed paths with a young woman mounted offensively on her bike, weaving slowly and carefully through the throng of shoppers in the specified walking-only area. As she passed him by, he said loudly, ‘This is a pedestrian-only zone! What don’t you understand!‘ She stared straight ahead of her, offensively ignoring his diktat, and George thought he even saw a quiet, yet still offensive, eye-roll.

He packed Marjory’s shopping in a huff, and made his way back to the High Street bus stop, thinking as he paused at a traffic light that he should like to have a good peruse of the Daily Mail when he returned home. His reverie was interrupted, however, by two things: the little red man changing over to green, and a harried cyclist, who had noted the sparsity of the crowd waiting to cross, outrageously attempting to run the red light before stopping a foot into the crossing to allow the pedestrians to pass.

This could not stand.

Excuse me,’ barked George in close proximity to the young besuited man’s face, ‘but your light is red. It is now the pedestrians’ turn to cross.’

‘Sorry,’ mumbled the cyclist under his helmet. The Detective Chief Constable of Unauthorised Cycling drew himself up to his full, but modest height, inflicted a final reproachful glare, breathed in sharply, and marched self-importantly across the road, where he waited indignantly to cross back over and retrieve his trolley, quite forgotten in the affray.

He sunk low and affronted into the bus seat reserved for the disabled and elderly, glowering at anyone who dared question the seating arrangement.

When he arrived home Marjory presented him with a coffee and the morning paper, and he lowered himself sullenly into his lounger. It had been another trying morning on the beat.