I Have That On Vinyl: Scarred for Life by Garth Jones

It’s, what, 1994? 1995?

You’re sixteen, anyway, on your regular post-school record store mission.

More accurately, it’s a RECORDS AND TAPES situation, though the CD is the ascendant form of recorded media. The shop’s owner, G.B., hasn’t had the coin to update the signage since he opened up in the mid ‘80s, though, and said records and tapes lurk, sullen and unloved, in the second hand racks and remainders bins.

You live in a tiny mining town in the surreally remote deserts of far western New South Wales, Australia. You haven’t seen it yet, but later in life you’ll refer to it as “you know, where Ted Kotcheff’s 1971 Australian New Wave classic Wake in Fright was shot” as shorthand when locating your point of origin in conversation.

Which is shorthand in itself for a place of tough blokes caked in lead and zinc, a pub for every hundred people, a place so perplexingly regional, outside of time, that it’s often referred to as The Walled City…

Read the full piece here.

Letterboxd by Garth Jones

So I buckled and finally signed up to Letterboxd.

What a beacon of social media joy in an otherwise blasted landscape of online horror and abject despair.

Plus, what a corker of an opportunity to archive a bunch of my old film musings. So, presented here are some faves from my years writing for Hopscotch Friday, Crosslight and a couple of other joints.

Sadly, all my ancient Livejournal bangers remain lost, even to the Archive.

Nonetheless, have at it:

Mad Max: Fury Road
Wyrmwood: Road of the Dead
Thor: Ragnarok
The Death of Superman Lives: What Happened?
Spider-Man: Homecoming
Baby Driver
T2: Trainspotting
Macbeth
Blade Runner 2049
Gods of Egypt
Into The Woods
Sin City: A Dame To Kill For
Underworld: Blood Wars
Bad Moms
The Girl on the Train
Dirty Grandpa
Mother!
Sausage Party
Step Up All In
Kingsman: The Secret Service
For No Good Reason
Ant-Man
Deadpool
Jupiter Ascending
Ghostbusters (2016)
Ex Machina
Chappie
Avengers: Age of Ultron
Warcraft
The Huntsman: Winter’s War
The Night Before
Guardians of the Galaxy
Spectre
Trainwreck
The Last Witch Hunter
The H8ful Eight
Hunt for the Wilderpeople

Flicks, we love them (don’t we folks?)!

PREVIEW: The Issue of the Feral Pig Down at Coffin Creek by Garth Jones

Protest poster in West End, Meanjin.

Day Two.
3.04am

IT was ol’ Mangled Jizzy that found those kids, the very first ones, y’know.

Young Donk Cowie’d parked his old man’s RAM – bloody ridiculous vehicle for a dentist – down by the flood marker off Crooked Stream Lane. Jizz told us it looked like the silly bugger’d been trying to get into young Shelsta Gabbatt’s knickers when they’d been taken.

By that I mean he found her knickers, soiled, and a half unrolled French Letter, if you catch my meaning.

The ‘paper, well, the ‘paper’s Facey page, The Coffin Creek Investigator, didn’t really get much into the details, barring that the cops were “treating the situation as suspicious”, “appealing to the public for information” that “parking in a flood zone is hazardous” and to “please welcome investigating officer Constable Ray Fistwell to The Creek”.

That sort of D-grader city journo bullshit.

Ol’ Jizzy may have been as mad as three cut snakes in a Whirlpool, but he’d also been a pretty handy snapper in the day.

He had The Eye, didn’t miss a bloody thing, much to our occasional chagrin.

That means it pissed us off, kid.

Anyway, we’d been shouting Jizz a round or ten when he’d spilled his guts on all the spilt guts.

“Looked like a feral pig what done it, lads. Pulled them kids out the cab before poor ole Donk had a poke, let alone a sniff of his fingers. Not right. Blood and shit and hair and all sorts everywhere. No bodies but. What squealer does that? Drags two kids off and… disappears? ”

Well, none of us had had a fucken clue, and the bastard 4G internet was out again, so we – we being town quack Doc Liversedge, me missus Narelle and Jimbo Paddock… yes, the Mayor (don’t get too excited, kid, that was 10% of Coffin Creek’s population there at the bar) – decided to leave the mystery to the no-doubt exemplary deductive abilities of the new town copper, Fistwell.

For now.

7.15am

Wasn’t long before them deductin’ skills were back in demand, neither.

You’re loca – you’ve heard of Snake Marks, right?
Nope?

Bloody hell, seriously, you kids –
Snake, actual Christian name lost to the vapours of Creek lore, was Mayor ‘round here well before Jimbo’s time (not to mention me and ‘Relle’s).

This was back in the eighties, when state government spooks were scuttling around the valley, rattling gates.

You know, natural gas and all that?
It was a dodgy business then and it still is, kid.

Anyway, I read up on Snake before ‘Relle and I decided to shift out here from the Goldie – his steampunk reimagining of Che’s life sealed the deal, t’be honest.

Yep, Snake was a capital ‘c’ Communist, and that drove the East Coast establishment mental. He’d really put it up ‘em when he was elected to state parliament, but Snake was also a capital ‘p’ Pisshead that all ended real quick, with broken limbs and a few less than exemplary headlines to boot.
Disgraced anywhere with a population over 500, Snake moved back out to the Creek, bought the pub and spent the next thirty-odd years cranking out revolutionary tracts.

It was a life lived like a deadset bloody legend, a real town luminary, until about a week back, when I found one’ve Comrade Snake’s size-13 cowboy boots on my morning run.
The blood on it was black, the other one gone.

Snake’s hip flask was thirty yards up the track, en route to his camper, bone dry.

The 4G was barely 3G that morning, but I got a sketchy line through to Constable Fistwell, who took his sweet bloody time getting there.

Valé Snake and all that…

Read the entire story in BLACK PILLS: 7 TALES TO ASTONISH & CONFOUND, out now!

Big Squid/ Pass the Amyl: Wake In Fright by Garth Jones

This latest edition of Pass The Amyl begins in media res, with the US Election hot take factory working overtime.

I think I call JD Vance a Christo-fascist in the first sixty seconds.

Then, we delve into the marginally less terrifying (almost) lost classic Wake In Fright (1971), directed by Weekend at Bernie’s Ted Kotcheff.

It’s a chunky 🦑 , chockers with insights into why you should squeegee your third eye before playing roulette, the very worst way to drive to Adelaide, and precisely what it was like growing up in Bundanyabba… I mean to say, Broken Hill.

Swipe for the debut of the pod-glasses, and be sure to head over to Hammo’s Patreon and sign up to get access to the full video of our chat.

Listen here!

Winner - Ronald Hugh Morrieson Short Fiction prize by Garth Jones

Collecting the gong for best short fiction at the Ronald Hugh Morrieson Literary Awards from living legend, author Clive David Hill CNZM, at TSB Hub in Hāwera last Wednesday evening.

(I asked if I could have the Mayor’s bling, too - no dice.)

Said winning tale, ‘Hugo Garrett’s Exemplary Mowing Technique’, will feature in my upcoming collection, BLACK PILLS, out on April Fool’s next year.

Check out the all the winners here.

A PRETTY MAJOR DOSE OF BUSH JUSTICE - short story by Garth Jones

Ken Oath had heard all about Jack Nines, and wasn’t having a fucking bar of it.

All sinew, mullet and leathery blue-inked muscle, Ken had seen a bit in his short life.
He was nudging fifteen, a Yorta Yorta lad who’d been running a fight club out back until recent.

Bastard rock spiders like Nines fazed him not.

Ken killed the engine of his busted old Falcon ute, discreet under the canopy of a gnarled river gum.

The needy drone of lap steel hung in the flat, baked midnight air.

Nines was home, wasted, as per, it seemed.

Ken peeled back the ute’s tarp, hauling out a jerry can and a long, slender object wrapped in a towel. Checking the knife in his boot, Ken sparked a dart and scanned all three sixty of the horizon.

No one came out here, ever.

Still, it paid to be cautious.

Dropping to his haunches, Ken loped across the creek to Nines’ shack.

There was a crack of dim orange light throbbing through the back window.

Jack Nines’ sick fuck career ended tonight, guaranteed.

Moving quickly, Ken dashed across the wreck-strewn yard and dropped down behind the rusted hulk of Nines’ roo shooting truck…

Read the full story Yarns from the Fuck-You-Ni-Verse.

FIVE STAR SERVICE - short fiction by Garth Jones

Ron Devereux had set up shop at the Wangkur GrintCo servo.

They did actual, bonafide five-star service.

Lower Wangkur, situated at the most desolate western point of Leftish Arcadia, was home to about three dozen. Its sister city, Hogg, was a lazy five hundred or so Ks north east.

Ron – former band manager, occasional bush shaman, indigenous to the region for roughly 25,000 years  – pumped petrol, squee-geed windscreens, made laboured small talk, the whole five star deal.

The servo saw ten customers, max, on a busy week.

It was the first day of spring, 2023.

A total fire ban was in effect, not that there was much to burn out here.

The digital thermometer hung next to an ancient cheesecake pin up outside Ron’s office read 47 degrees C.

It was 8am.

Ron had been tooling about with a gas refill, lit cig dangling precariously from his bottom lip, when a late model Beemer materialised out of the desert, encrusted in a shell of thick red mud.

It rolled up to a pump and its noncy German engine sighed as the driver killed the ignition.

The door swung and a chunky looking bloke in full bush costume bounded out.

Freshly pressed check shirt, Levis, suspiciously pristine cowboy boots, a spotlessly clean oversize akubra he’d no doubt got off the internet.

“Hot enough for ya?” he’d enthused, because of course he was the sort of bastard that opened a conversation like that.

Ron sized him up.

Playstation 6 phone case.

Flowing auburn ponytail, turning to rust.

Just shy of fifty.

Yep.

Wanker.

“Fill her up thanks cobber!” old mate chirped, oblivious. “Long drive ahead of me today! I’m a radio journalist, you see – the top brass just shipped me over from Sydney –“

Ron shuddered involuntarily.

“– and I’m off up to do a story on –“

Ron levered the cap off his hip flask, took a swig. He tuned out and pumped the bloke’s petrol. City spivs, especially from that bastard place, got him all homicidal.

The pump clicked and Ron screwed the cap back on.

He lit another cig and squinted at the Beemer.

“Car wash up in Hogg if you need.”

The wanker was still mid-reverie. He handed Ron cash, swung back into the pilot’s seat and flicked a salute as tinted electric windows hummed up…

Read the full story in Yarns From the Fuck-You-Ni-Verse.