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Books written by Ray Sullivan
Showing posts with label 2014 forecast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2014 forecast. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 November 2018

Hotel California

Three years ago, resting after a hard day's decorating with laptop on my knee and a single malt to my side, I started writing the blurb to my latest book.  We'd had music playing all day as we painted and my mind had wandered off into that space that it goes to when I'm occupied with repetitive tasks.

Within a half hour of typing frenzy I came up with the bare bones of a concept for a new novel that sat untouched for some months, then was worked on sporadically for the next couple of years and that I've had a concerted push on over the last five months.

I probably should have been a little more focussed; everyone I showed the concept document to - and I've shared it with quite a few friends and family members over the years - has urged me to complete the story but I guess you just have to be in the mood for these things.

Anyway, the book is finished, proof read, edited and published.  It's available in paperback and eBook versions at all the usual suspects - Amazon, iTunes, Barnes and Noble, Kobo etc



So, what is the book about?  Ever wondered, possibly wished that the famous celebrities, the musicians and artists who die too young, were still alive?  What if there was a secret location they could retire from the public view to be pampered for the remainder of their natural lives, a location that while an open secret in the industry is one that you and I aren't privy to?  To the industry it has become known as Hotel California, a name inspired by the song of the same name by the Eagles.

Your favourite dead musician might live there, but they would have had to fake their own death first, arranging for some John Doe to be lowered into the ground to cover up for the fact they're still breathing.  Such a location, say an island in the South Seas, might have been plausibly secret in the seventies or eighties, but in the internet age keeping such a place secret would be difficult, if not impossible, without some extraordinary measures - such as shipping labour to run the resort from third world locations and not letting them return home.  Ever.

Enter Ricky Maggott, punk rock megastar of the eighties, reality show goon of the nineties, jaded and hacked off musician in the current world.  He wants out, and he gets his manager to arrange it.  Consequently Ricky makes the journey to Hotel California but soon realises he's made a mistake.  Concurrently Aiden McKie, a music journalist who specialises in Ricky's career, identifies an issue with the story of his premature demise and endeavours to find out the truth.

The result is a very dark comedy that takes in sex, drugs and rock n roll.  Here is the blurb for the book:


For celebrities, death is only the beginning of the end.

Imagine you are a rock star, a very famous rock star, very rich, very popular and very tired/bored/fed up/ and being chased by the IRS/ex-wives/old band members.  What do you do?

Touring to pay the back tax isn’t going to work – more money just to pay the taxman, the ex can find you from your tour schedule and you’ll probably need to enlist the assistance of the old band members to hold the tour anyway. They’ll probably want paying for the last tour as well as the new one and worse, they’ll probably expect to use the same hotel.

Ignoring the situation doesn’t work either.  Taxmen just don’t go away; nor do ex-wives.  Old band members might forget about you, depending on whether they’re in-between rehab or not.

Just disappearing seems attractive, but not only will the taxman, your ex-wives and former band mates keep on looking to find you, so will your fans, the biggest pain-in-the-ass group ever to make a talentless singer rich and famous, who seem to believe collectively that they deserve to poke into each and every facet of your miserable life.  And then there’s bloody Hello magazine….

Suicide might seem like a good idea, tax is someone else’s problem, the ex can go to hell – you can meet up later.  But it’s so very final. 

If only there was a way to disappear, appear to die but actually keep on living.  That’s when you need to get your manager to arrange a meeting with Tony Morroney, General Manager of Hotel California, located on a mysterious South Sea island, populated with the allegedly dead but rich and famous – rock stars, film stars, dictators who got out before the Russians got to the bunker, that kind of elite.  As long as you’ve got the money, future earnings and can commit to never leaving the island, never contacting your family and loved ones and agree to be buried on the island in an unmarked shallow grave when you finally shrug your mortal coil, then Hotel California may be for you.  Don’t get worked up over the grave, you should have a fabulous one your fans flock to in pilgrimage all year round. You get a great send-off while you’re alive and your royalties rocket (ex-dictators may have to sell off stolen artwork to stay solvent, because Hotel California is very much a one-way journey, run out of cash and that shallow grave is your only destination). The hotel has been there a long time and Tony is just the latest in a long line of very discreet and ultimately ruthless managers of the hotel that you can check out of anytime you like, but you never can leave. 

When 1980s Punk Rock Star Ricky Maggott dies suddenly of a complication during a routine operation his fan base is bereft, none more so than Pulitzer Prize winning music journalist Aidan McKie. Like most fans who have followed Ricky since his punk rock entry in 1985 until his untimely death, Aidan swallowed the whole story about the autopsy, the burial and the highly tax efficient release of a box set of all of Ricky’s recordings within hours of his death.  Then he started to see issues with the facts and took his grieving head off and put his journalist head on.  He started asking the right questions of the wrong people, found himself being targeted by ruthless assassins and has to flee.  But to where?  Well, in his investigation he finds out about Hotel California, the place celebrities go to when they want to disappear from public life, and makes his way there.  Once there he finds that the residents are not all happy about the arrangements and while he can cope with all the sex, drugs and Rock n’ Roll Hotel California throws at him, it’s the killing he can do without.

Search your favourite book site for Hotel California





Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Sullivan's Almanac 2014

Last year I made some suggestion on how 2013 might pan out in the weird and wacky tech, social networking and ebook worlds. Not surprisingly I didn't get everything right and in the time honoured tradition of making forecasts out of nothing more than a misguide sense of my own opinions, I have decided that history was wrong and that I could do better this time. All I need is for my version of the truth to be accepted and for that time machine that I've been working on to give me the edge this year.

But not everything I forecast last year was wrong. I guessed the stock values of Microsoft, Apple, Google, Facebook and Twitter would rise and fall. They did, if not in that order and heck, Twitter wasn't even listed back then! I did consider that Google or Amazon would rule the planet by this time this year, so I guess I was right after a fashion. Google didn't build the time machine I've been working on, or if they did I haven't noticed the temporal tear as they attempted to go back in time to invent Facebook. Or perhaps it was the other way around and the timeline has been rewritten. I guess I'll never know.

So what does 2014 hold in the tech world? Well we'll see the demise of the dedicated eReader. I've mentioned this a few times this last year, but this holiday season will be the last time significant amounts of these fine devices will be sold in quantity. The rise of tablet computing, with the attached benefits, has made the dedicated eReader all but redundant, especially as you can now buy basic tablets for under £50 and reasonably well specified models for just over £100. The trend is going to continue, we'll just accept the daily routine of charging our tablets and learning to read in the shade - a no brainer in the UK thanks to the clouds. There will be a small surge in sales of dedicated eReaders as companies holding stagnant stock offload them - that'll be me at the front of the queue making sure I've secured a spare for a knock down rate. Just in case the sun comes out.

Apple will have a crisis of confidence mid year when they realise that they are losing market share big time. They've translated a loyal and essentially niche customer base to the general population, not realising that real people are less forgiving than the long term Apple aficionados. To be fair, if they hadn't made such a mess of iOS 6 then upset nearly everyone with iOS7's new layout, they might have got away with it. But of course they still only provide one size of phone, two sizes of tablet and everyone knows they make over 65% of the product price as profit. Arrogant we can take, arrogant and greedy - taking the Michael surely? I know of people seemingly locked into the Apple environment seriously considering turning their backs on Apple next time they replace their tablet or phone - especially the phones with their outrageous lock in periods - aiming to adopt the cheaper and more varied Android devices. They'll probably keep their old Apple devices limping along to access the content they've bought on iTunes, but it's a slippy slope for Apple. If they're smart, and they do seem to be a bright bunch over there, they'll allow others to make devices that can run iOS, which might just turn sentiment around, but I doubt it. They've crashed and burned from a stellar position before and this time Steve Jobs won't be back to save them.

Google are going to have a rough year, along with Facebook. Normal people will start to realise that the NSA snooping on our emails to try and keep the majority of us safe from the evil minority is nothing compared to the shameless way these guys cut, dice and hawk our personal data. The Snowden scandal will have its second wind as journalists start to ask the real questions. Such as why Facebook saves the text we choose not to post. There's a background rumble about the way these organisations accumulate and sell on information about us, it could turn into a backlash this coming year. Of course we all accept that search engines and social media is here to stay, but expect alternatives to surface this coming year. Perhaps they'll have a model that doesn't involve stripping every piece of data out of us just for interacting with them.

Amazon will come under fire internationally as governments start to realise that the downside to a phenomenally successful company investing in their country is that it cuts the legs from underneath the small and medium sized traders who cannot compete with the likes of Amazon. When the politicians realise that Amazon employ less potential voters than they displace, and the tax revenues from the failed home-grown companies lost is greater than Amazon's less than generous tax avoided donations to the exchequer then things might get a little awkward.

So my forecast for next year is that between the people and their governments the excessively large players in the tech world will have a stormy ride. They'll survive it, of course, and may well come out stronger than ever. But I suspect there will be plenty to blog about this coming year.

If we don't meet before 2013 is out, have a happy New Year. Unless you're a tech giant.

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