Alistair Fruish is an English filmmaker, writer and novelist, born in Northampton. [1]
Fruish is known for his novel Kiss My ASBO. [2] Along with a number of other short stories by the writer, the initial section of Kiss My ASBO, "Double Bubble", was first published in Philosophy Now . [1] [2] On its release the book was highly praised by British working-class writers Alan Moore, Russ Litten and Alex Wheatle, with Courttia Newland describing it as "completely original". [3] Writer and editor Steve Moore called the book "a masterpiece". [3] During a Prison Reading Groups supported visit to maximum-security prison HMP Full Sutton to discuss the book with prisoners, Fruish referred to the book's genre as "grime fiction", with prisoners celebrating the colloquial language and lyrical experience of reading the book. [4] Kiss My ASBO is one of the books that have been banned from Guantanamo Bay. [5]
Fruish is also author of a 46,000-word single-sentence work that is entirely monosyllabic, called The Sentence, [5] which has been staged around Britain, and is performed in non-stop group readings orchestrated by the director Daisy Eris Campbell. These performances began in February 2017 at The Cockpit in London [6] and ended in March 2018 at the British Library. [7] Readers have included, Alan Moore, Robin Ince, Jeff Young, Alan Cox, Sean McCann, Frances Thorburn and Gavin Mitchell. [8] The Sentence is highly unusual in that it is not officially published, but has been performed in its entirety as part of a nationwide tour. [8] John Higgs said of the piece, "It is tempting to see The Sentence as the spirit of all books raising their game now that virtual reality threatens to take their place as our most vivid art form." [6]
Since 2001 Fruish has worked in over 40 prisons as a writer-in-residence. [5] Since starting out at HMP Wellingborough he has worked as a writer in nearly every category and type of English prison, in both the public and private sectors and both male and female estate. With HMP Full Sutton's writer-in-residence Gerry Ryan, he initiated the first ever writer-led arts project at the Military Corrective Training Centre (MCTC) military prison in Colchester. As of 2015 he was based in HMP Leicester where he worked closely with Senior Community Librarian Louise Dowell. [9] He has collaborated with a number of other artists on prison arts projects including Dr Bruce Wall of the London Shakespeare Workout [10] and poet John Row. [11] Fruish is dyslexic and was drawn to work with prisoners because of the large levels of literacy problems found among the prison population. [5] In Prison a Survival Guide, Carl Cattermole, states, "I've personally come across some of the best teachers in my life through prison - educators like Alistair Fruish are prime examples." [12] In a report by the House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills Committee, on adult literacy and numeracy, Fruish is quoted as saying, "sadly, there are only a handful of writers-in-residence remaining working in prisons. Much of the expertise that has been built up over the last two decades is in danger of being lost". [13] As a response to the pandemic Fruish edited three TOOLBOX books and made them available to prisons in the UK. Inside Time described them as, "full of high-quality creative games, life enhancing exercise techniques and personal development tips for all ages and abilities. The books have many contributions from scores of writers, scientists and artists". [14]
Along with Steve Moore, John Higgs and Donna Bond he is one of the four editors of Alan Moore's Jerusalem. [15] Moore credits Fruish's research with providing vital information that allowed him to finish the novel. [16] In an interview with his biographer, Lance Parkin, Moore states that he has few hobbies, but he likes to go for walks with Fruish, whom he met when Fruish invited Moore back to visit the school he was expelled from. [17] [18] Moore recounts how he and Fruish were ejected from Easton Neston Hall while walking around it in From Hell . [19] Fruish also took Moore in to HMP Wellingborough to meet prisoners. [18]
In the mid-1980s, while still at school, Fruish edited a magazine called Tripping Yarns. [15] Issue two appeared in 1988 and contained an interview with Kathy Acker conducted by Alan Moore, as well as an interview and retrospective with underground comic artist Edwin Pouncey aka Savage Pencil, who also provided the cover. The magazine included an interview with publisher Tony Bennet, as well as interviews with the bands Killdozer and the Butthole Surfers. [20]
In the late 1980s Fruish worked for independent record company Blast First. [8] During this time he toured with the band Dinosaur Jr. [8]
Fruish played the role of William Burroughs in Daisy Eris Campbell's theatrical adaptation and production Cosmic Trigger at The Cockpit theatre in May 2017. [21] He also created two podcasts to accompany this production. The first is a conversation with Erik Davis, [22] the second, In the Sphere Of The Mind, voiced by Oliver Senton as Robert Anton Wilson, and Kate Alderton as Arlen Riley Wilson, a poetic take on John Lilly's Beliefs Unlimited. [23] Fruish had previously given a talk entitled "R.A.W on the Inside" at the Daisy Eris curated festival Find The Others, that accompanied the original performance of Cosmic Trigger in Liverpool in 2014. [24]
Fruish appears, is credited, thanked or acknowledged in a number of books and publications including: Yvvette Edwards' The Mother, [25] Andrew O'Neill's History of Heavy Metal, [26] John Higgs Watling Street, [27] Deborah Delano's Saddest Sound, [28] and A. William James Book Thirteen, [29] which is in part dedicated to Fruish.
Fruish is a member of the Northampton Arts Lab. [15]
Discordianism is a set of ideas based around the mythology and associations of Eris, the Greek goddess of strife and discord, and variously defined as a religion, philosophy, paradigm, or parody religion. It was founded after the 1963 publication of its "holy book," the Principia Discordia, written by Greg Hill with Kerry Wendell Thornley, the two working under the pseudonyms Malaclypse the Younger and Omar Khayyam Ravenhurst.
Robert Anton Wilson was an American author, futurist, psychologist, and self-described agnostic mystic. Recognized within Discordianism as an Episkopos, pope and saint, Wilson helped publicize Discordianism through his writings and interviews. In 1999 he described his work as an "attempt to break down conditioned associations, to look at the world in a new way, with many models recognized as models or maps, and no one model elevated to the truth". Wilson's goal was "to try to get people into a state of generalized agnosticism, not agnosticism about God alone but agnosticism about everything."
The Illuminatus! Trilogy is a series of three novels by American writers Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, first published in 1975. The trilogy is a satirical, postmodern, science fiction–influenced adventure story; a drug-, sex-, and magic-laden trek through a number of conspiracy theories, both historical and imaginary, related to the authors' version of the Illuminati. The narrative often switches between third- and first-person perspectives in a nonlinear narrative. It is thematically dense, covering topics like counterculture, numerology, and Discordianism.
His Majesty's Prison Service (HMPS) is a part of HM Prison and Probation Service, which is the part of His Majesty's Government charged with managing most of the prisons within England and Wales.
Lance Parkin is a British author. He is best known for writing fiction and reference books for television series, in particular Doctor Who and as a storyliner on Emmerdale.
Cosmic Trigger I: The Final Secret of The Illuminati is the first book in the Cosmic Trigger series, first published in 1977 and the first of a three-volume autobiographical and philosophical work by Robert Anton Wilson. It has a foreword by Timothy Leary, which he wrote in the summer of 1977.
Jamie Delano is an English comic book writer. He was part of the first post-Alan Moore "British Invasion" of writers which started to feature in American comics in the 1980s. He is best known as the first writer of the comic book series Hellblazer, featuring John Constantine.
HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs is a Category B men's local prison, located beside Hammersmith Hospital and W12 Conferences on Du Cane Road in the White City in West London, England. The prison is operated by His Majesty's Prison Service.
The Special Executive is a fictional group of time-traveling mercenaries appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The characters were decpicted in comic strips published by Marvel UK. The initial incarnation was created by Alan Moore and David Lloyd for Doctor Who Monthly; Alan Davis later expanded the line-up when they appeared in Captain Britain.
Sean Michael Carroll is an American theoretical physicist and philosopher who specializes in quantum mechanics, cosmology, and philosophy of science. Formerly a research professor at the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) department of physics, he is currently an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute, and the Homewood Professor of Natural Philosophy at Johns Hopkins University. He has been a contributor to the physics blog Cosmic Variance, and has published in scientific journals such as Nature as well as other publications, including The New York Times, Sky & Telescope and New Scientist. He is known for his atheism, his vocal critique of theism and defense of naturalism. He is considered a prolific public speaker and science populariser. In 2007, Carroll was named NSF Distinguished Lecturer by the National Science Foundation.
Alan Moore is an English author known primarily for his work in comic books including Watchmen, V for Vendetta, The Ballad of Halo Jones, Swamp Thing, Batman: The Killing Joke, and From Hell. He is widely recognised among his peers and critics as one of the best comic book writers in the English language. Moore has occasionally used such pseudonyms as Curt Vile, Jill de Ray, Brilburn Logue, and Translucia Baboon; also, reprints of some of his work have been credited to The Original Writer when Moore requested that his name be removed.
Michelle Olley is a British writer, journalist and magazine and book editor.
Noel "Razor" Smith is a British writer and former criminal. He has spent the greater part of his adult life in prison, serving a life sentence for armed robbery. In prison he taught himself to read and write, gained an Honours Diploma from the London School of Journalism and an A-level in law. He has been awarded a number of Koestler awards for his writing and has contributed articles to the Independent, the Guardian, Punch, the Big Issue, the New Statesman and the New Law Journal. His autobiography, A Few Kind Words and a Loaded Gun, was published by Penguin in 2004. He went on to write A Rusty Gun: Facing Up To a Life of Crime in 2010 after serving at the unique rehabilitation prison HMP Grendon and moving to HMP Blantyre House, prior to being released on 12 May 2010.
Jerusalem is a novel by British author Alan Moore, wholly set in and around the author's home town of Northampton, England. Combining elements of historical and supernatural fiction and drawing on a range of writing styles, the author describes it as a work of "genetic mythology". Published in 2016, Jerusalem took a decade to write. The novel is divided into three Books, "The Boroughs", "Mansoul", and "Vernall's Inquest".
Storybook Dads is a non-profit charity in the UK founded by Sharon Berry and first launched in HM Prison Dartmoor in 2003. The charity enables serving prisoners and detainees to record bed time stories which can then be sent home to their children, and aims to maintain connections between serving prisoners and their families. In women's institutions the project operates under the name Storybook Mums.
John Higgs is an English writer, novelist, journalist and cultural historian. The work of Higgs has been published in the form of novels, biographies and works of cultural history.
Watling Street: Travels Through Britain and Its Ever-Present Past is the fifth book by the British journalist, novelist and cultural historian John Higgs. The book charts Higgs's journey along Watling Street, one of the oldest roads in Britain, from Dover to Anglesey, during which journey he records the so-called hidden history of this ancient path from its first creation up to the present day. As well as recording the historical figures and their stories surrounding the road, Higgs also meets up with and interviews contemporary figures along the way such as Alan Moore and Alistair Fruish. The author describes the history of the road as, "Watling Street is a road of witches and ghosts, of queens and highwaymen, of history and myth, of Chaucer, Dickens and James Bond. Along this route Boudicca met her end, the battle of Bosworth changed royal history, Bletchley Park code breakers cracked Nazi transmissions and Capability Brown remodelled the English landscape.
Daisy Eris Campbell, is a British writer, actress and theatre director. Daughter of actor and director Ken Campbell and actress and therapist Prunella Gee. She staged The Warp, a revival of Neil Oram's 24-hour play at The Everyman Theatre, Liverpool. Campbell also adapted Robert Anton Wilson’s cult autobiographical book Cosmic Trigger for the stage. She played the role of her mother in the play. Cosmic Trigger is a kind of sequel to her father's adaptation of Robert Anton Wilson's Illuminatus! Allegedly, Daisy was conceived during the original production of Illuminatus! In part, the play of Cosmic Trigger deals with the production of Ken Campbell's adaptation of Illuminatus! in Liverpool in 1976.
Joseph McCann is an English serial rapist. In April and May 2019, McCann committed sexual attacks in Hertfordshire, London, Greater Manchester and Cheshire against 11 strangers, ranging in age from an 11-year-old boy to a 71-year-old woman. He evaded police, who suspect that he was sheltered by a "support network" across the country. For these crimes, he was tried at the Old Bailey and, on 6 December, convicted of 37 offences. Three days later, he was given 33 life sentences.