LeftLion 50

LeftLion celebrated its 50th birthday on 1 December and to celebrate we sunk a few beers in the ridiculously expensive Orange Tree. We decided not to milk this in the magazine because it’s not really our style. We’ll save that for 2014 which will mark our tenth year of surviving on wits alone in the brutal realm of print media. Instead we celebrated our latest significant anniversary by interviewing Shane Meadows who appeared in the first ever issue. It made for a nice bit of symmetry while also giving us the excuse to break our number one rule that you only ever get one interview in the magazine.

The front cover was shot in my front room but you wouldn’t be able to tell as the background was blurred out to focus in on the main image of a Quality Street tin which would later become ‘Clumber Street – an unsavoury assortment of chattiness and trainer shops’. Dom Henry popped over to take the image and brought an array of Christmassy treats with him – wine, smelly cheese, chocolates, to be used in the shot which was wolfed down shortly after.

Photoshoot in our front room.

The Quality Street tin was painted white for the photograph so that it would be easier to draw over when it was handed over to our illustrator. Now when people pop over the house for a glass of mulled wine they look at the tin and think that I’m some kind of minimalist who likes chocolate but has a Naomi Kleinesque aversion to branding.

WriteLion saw the return of a bumper book reviews pages, with reviews of Graham Joyce, Alan Sillitoe and Zoe Fairbairns as well as NottsLit Blog stepping in to review three books from Pewter Rose. I really like the idea of featuring guest reviewers looking at specific publishers as it offers a little bit more promotion for both. Our poetry page also included three bonus reviews of Sue Dymoke, Kathryn Daszkiewicz and Alan Baker. Katie Half-Price was given a Santa’s hat courtesy of our wonderful illustrator Rebecca Hibberd and got stuck into E.L.James, Naomi Wolf and Graham Rawle. It was great fun to write as always and a scary reminder of how easy it is to get into character. My girlfriend always looks a little puzzled when she reads it.

The literature interview was with Alison Moore who was recently shortlisted for the Booker Prize for her debut novel The Lighthouse. The illustration came from Michelle Haywood and as always is an example of getting your work (and brief) in early to allow an illustrator time to work on their design. The Lighthouse is a wonderful book, full of subtle warnings that become clearer on a second read. It also has a wonderful rhythm to it, a little like John Banville’s The Sea. Alison is a genuinely lovely person and will go on to be a very significant writer. Salt are definitely my publisher of the year for having the bollocks and faith to submit the novel, given all of the financial risks this entails.

LeftLion 49

LeftLion 49 is out and it’s a right whopper, weighing in at a gigantic 56 pages. And before you start, there’s only 15 pages of adverts. That means 41 pages completely devoted to Nottingham culture. I dedicated the WriteLion page to Black History Month and ran with an interview with Kerry Young, whose debut novel Pao was nominated for the Costa as well as the East Midlands Book Award and examines the changing fortunes of Jamaica, which celebrates its 50th anniversary of independence this year. Kerry is yet another success from the NTU MA in Creative Writing which just goes to prove getting in debt can pay off now and then.

I ran with three mini features at the bottom of the page celebrating Black History Month. These were I is AnOther, an exhibition celebrating Jamaican identity at the New Art Exchange which takes its name from an Arthur Rimbaud poem; Mouthy Poets, an open collective of young people whose  latest production ‘Black T-Shirt Collection’ will be performed at the Playhouse on 9/10 November; Blackdrop who were celebrating their ninth birthday by returning back to their roots at the Canal House. It’s not really LeftLion style to be explicit or ‘right on’ with issues but I do think we should do more to support Black History Month.

Our illustrated poem was about Rosa Parks and written by Alex MotaMouf Young who I commissioned to rap about finding solitude in the digital age for The Space. We also included an interview with Andrew ‘MulletProofPoet’ Graves who was also commissioned for the Sillitoe Trail project on The Space. Andrew recently had his first poetry collection Citizen Kaned published by Crystal Creators and will also be hosting Sillitoe Evening at the Nottingham Contemporary on 27 October which will include music from Gaffa and Sleaford Mods. The fabulous photograph was taken by David Sillitoe.

Our Notts metro map went down a treat and is another example of something that should be pushed further through merchandising but sadly nothing will come of this because it never does. Maybe there’s a savvy business graduate out there who could get in contact and help us develop our somewhat stagnated business model. And don’t even get me started on the fact that we don’t have an App for the mag…

I had the privilege of interviewing Jon Ronson who is a big hero of mine. I met him at No Direction Home Festival in June and then arranged a phone interview. Jon is a genuinely lovely person and when I called him in September at his home in New York (80p per minute from a mobile or 8p per minute if you pay £2.80 for a phone deal in advance) he put me completely at rest. Given the topics he writes about it was a pretty easy interview as I was spoilt for choice. I was disappointed that there was only 100 or so people for his talk at the Broadway Cinema on 4 October which I think was down to the following reasons: It clashed with Goose Fair, it was at an odd time at 6pm and it wasn’t marketed very well (probably because sponsors Waterstones have just changed managers). Afterwards, Jon stayed behind signing copies of his books and insisting on having at least a five minute natter with everyone he met. If only all writers were as lovely. He absolutely loved the illustration and so I’m dedicating this issue to those people who make the magazine beautiful. Illustration wise it’s Adam Poole, Steve Larder and the one and only Rikki Marr, official Secret Wars champion of Britain, and of course our photoshop Jedi and designer, Becca Hibberd.