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Passing Place: Location Relative

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"The Greyhound pulled away into the thunderous summer storm, leaving in its wake a dishevelled, world-weary figure in the dark, deserted bus station."
Richard is a man come to the end. Grieving after the death of his wife he has travelled the back roads of America in the search for an answer to that most impossible of questions. Why? Looking for that answer in all the wrong place.
In a Hicksville town in the western desert, he answers a want ad for a piano player and finds himself in the Passing Place, an impossible bar, where the patrons all have tales to tell…
Fantasy and sci-fiction collide with horror and the supernatural in a world where reality is a matter of perception...


Sonny, the doorman, drinks his brandy and tells a story of death row. A green haired girl sits in her tree and speaks of the wolf of winter. The Weaver of tears, cries her diamonds, and the Gunslinger speaks of death riding in on desert winds. The Greyman tells of his soulless world, before dancing with his mop once more. While in the kitchen the chef bends causality to make the greatest sandwich in the world, and the devil behind the bar tells tall tales while he pours you a drink.
Welcome to Esqwith's Piano Bar and Grill... Where the impossible is the everyday and reality is just a matter of perspective. And even the cat has a story to tell…
An impossible place that bridges dimensions and time itself. A place where stories are told and retold anew, and a place where something lurks unseen, something from the void, something dangerous, something hungry, something red...

Paperback

Published January 1, 2019

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About the author

Mark Hayes

27 books50 followers
Mark writes novels that often defy simple genre definitions, they could be described as speculative fiction, though Mark would never use the term as he prefers not to speculate.

When not writing novels Mark is a persistent pernicious procrastinator, he recently petitioned parliament for the removal of the sixteenth letter from the Latin alphabet.

He is also 7th Dan Blackbelt in the ancient Yorkshire marshal art of EckEThump and favours a one man one vote system but has yet to supply the name of the man in question.

Mark has also been known to not take bio very serious.

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5 stars
22 (75%)
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7 (24%)
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Joseph Carrabis.
Author 59 books123 followers
October 31, 2021
I read Hayes' “The Strange and the Wonderful” in Harvey Duckman Presents V7 and was (am still) amazed by it (I reviewed it in Why It Works for Me – Mark Hayes’ “The Strange and the Wonderful”). I reached out to Hayes and learned “The Strange and the Wonderful” is part of the Passing Place mythos, so asked for an autographed copy of Passing Place.


It took a week to read the book because 1) I'm a slow reader and 2) I was savoring it. Passing Place is a fine meal, an elegant respite from the world's chaos. I'm leaving the following review in several places and the baseline take-away is READ THIS BOOK!
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Basic Review

READ THIS BOOK!


Written based on reading only the first 200 pages

Imagine Ray Bradbury as a line. Now do the same for Lord Dunsany. Now Frank Baum and finally Lewis Carroll. Hold them as infinite, straight lines in your mind. Do the same for Cream, Yes, ELP, and Peter Gabriel. For visuals, take Jon Favreau, Steven Speilberg, Wim Wenders, and Guillermo del Toro Gómez.

Arrange these straight-line wonders so they all intersect at the same point. That point is Mark Hayes' Passing Place.

I've known Hayes for a while as a fellow Harvey Duckman author, and you can get a sample of Passing Place in his "The Strange and the Wonderful" in Harvey Duckman Presents V7 (along with the works of many other authors). "The Strange and the Wonderful," more than anything else I've read to date of Hayes' work, caused me to get the book.

Rarely do I read anything with such power, such vision, such imagination, such intimacy. If I've ever read a book ripe for movie treatment, this is it. Take The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, and Pan's Labyrinth and you have a start. Passing Place takes magic realism, stands it on its head, and brings it full force to the native English speaking world.

Hayes' visuals are amazing, some amazingly disturbing. He borrows from lots of sources and lists them in the beginning of the book. He also lists a chapter-by-chapter discography and I have no idea if those were his inspirations or are listening suggestions.

Hayes' settings are so sensorially rich you may have trouble removing yourself from them.

Have you ever read a book you wanted to get back to? You needed to finish your required activities so you could get back to it?

That's Passing Place for me.

Hayes writes it took five years to complete the book. Those five years must have been like Tiziano Terzani's fifth century before Christ: "What a fantastic combination of stars there must have been in the fifth century before Christ! So many great spirits, all born at the same time: Sophocles, Pericles, Plato and Aristotle in Greece; Zoroaster in Persia; Buddha in India; Lao Tse and Confucius in China. All, more or less, in the space of a hundred years. Today many, many more people are born, but not a single one who can measure up to those. Why? Is the reason in the stars?"

I hope Hayes stays under the stars because I want to read more work like this.

Passing Place has a raw power to it I often find in first novels of gifted writers finding their authorial voice; people who share their experiences in their writing, are flexing their writing muscles, and write to let what's inside out. Some writers - myself included - so work at craft they lose their power and voice for a while. I haven't read Hayes' later works and I hope he continues to grow and maintains his power and voice. The world would be a grayer place without them, and if Hayes continues in this arc, I'm hanging up my pen and keyboard. I can't compete.

Final note: I started reading Passing Place and quickly concluded it needed at least one more editing pass. The work so engaged me I wanted to contact Hayes and offer to pay for professional editing for the book.

Then I started paying attention to the "errors".

Pay attention. If these errors are intentional, Hayes is a genius of the best kind: subtle, whimsical, and worthy. If they're not intentional, Hayes is a genius and needs to let the cat out of the box.


Written with only ~50 pages left to read

The second half of the book maintains the power and drive of the first half, plus adds extra dimensions (and considering how rich the first half is, I wouldn't have thought this possible).

The second half adds Samuel R. Delany when he's at the top of his game and Truman Capote's early writings of the lyricism/magic of life in the American South.

There was a point in the third quarter of the book where I thought I knew where the book was going and hoped I was mistaken. I trust Hayes enough to relish his misleading me, as if guiding me through the twisty, windy, root covered halls of a dark earth cellar (anybody remember the original, mainframe Adventure? It's like that).

As I child I often became absorbed by books to the point where I didn't want them to end because, when they did, the magic would end, too. I don't think that's the case with Hayes' Passing Place. There's too much magic in here. It seeps out if you let it (please let it).
I wrote previously about the "errors" in the manuscript (the mathematical linguist in me may have been buffering apophenia, specifically pareidolia). I've decided I won't offer to pay for editing because part of Passing Place's magic are the errors themselves. To remove them would be to deny Hayes of his voice and the book of much of its authority. I'll do neither.

What I will do, however, is send an ebook or print copy of Passing Place to the first ten people who contact me about this post with this caveat: you must write a review on both Amazon and Goodreads of Passing Place.

Your call, your turn.


Written after completing the book

I go back to my opening of "READ THIS BOOK!"

I'll add Joseph Campbell to the mix of author/influencers. The book didn't go the two places I anticipated and that's because I'm an idiot. Hayes put all the clues to where the book really went throughout the manuscript and kept me so focused on what I was reading I didn't pull back enough to connect all the dots (and spoiler alert - Hayes has a remarkable metaphor involving connecting the dots in here).

I dogeared the last twenty or so pages because Hayes litters the book with amazing lines (Hegelian puzzle masters will love the end of this book. Anybody studying perception versus reality must read this book).

Am I gushing? Of course, I'm gushing. This book and Hayes deserve it. As I wrote earlier, I haven't relished a book this much since I was a child/early teenager and I can list the books which brought me so into their world: Asimov's (original) Foundation Trilogy, Crichton's Andromeda Strain, Thomas' The Seed, Van Vogt's Rogue Ship and Voyage of the Space Beagle, Blish's The Seedling Stars, Simak's City, Lem's Eden and Solaris, Bakis' Lives of the Monster Dogs, ...). Each of these books opened my mind and made me think (glorious think). Hayes' Passing Place enters a hallowed gallery in my mind. It made me think and question, and for that I can never say thanks enough.

10 reviews
August 5, 2019
Part mystery, part adventure, ‘Passing Place’ follows the adventure of Richard the piano player as he navigates his new life working at the mysterious Esquiths Passing Place bar – a bar which never seems to stay in one place for very long.

This is a well-written and engaging story that cleverly uses the main protagonist as the link between the various characters that inhabit the bar. The author has pulled off the neat trick of giving each character a distinct and believable voice of their own, while also staying true to the tone of the overall story. This is a story that stayed with me after I had finished reading it and I will be eagerly awaiting the sequel.
Profile Image for Mark Hayes.
Author 27 books50 followers
December 23, 2016
This is a novel about many things, but more than anything else it is a novel about stories. The ones we tell, the ones we here and the ones we all know. How they influence our lives and our perceptions of the world around us. How they teach us about ourselves.
Fantasy and sci-fiction collide with horror and the supernatural in a world where reality is a matter of perception...
Author 1 book15 followers
September 27, 2016
Mr. Hayes reached deep in his soul to produce this read and a philosopher emerged, spinning a tale that takes us alongside the main character, Richard, whose grief presents reality in a questionable light. This is not my usual genre (slightly dark fantasy), but I have to say I was blown away by the in-depth look into the human psyche. A highly enjoyable 5 star read.
Profile Image for Robert Treadwell.
3 reviews
August 2, 2019
A collection of stories each linked by a bar which at some point we all have looked for sometime in our life - a cross section of the authors writing style and links mixes with other books too
Profile Image for Steven Davis.
Author 55 books12 followers
September 17, 2023
Well. I can now understand why that took years to write. A very interesting and inspiring piece that wanders delightedly all over the place. I could tell you about it, but it's a rare 5 stars from me. The level of detail here is phenomenal, the immersion into different cultures and eras, without reading like research that's just been lumpenly dropped in. There's a cat at the heart of it, and a forest and a void (not all things are equal or good) and a bar is as good as setting for this kind of tale as anywhere. At its heart .. maybe a love story with life.
Profile Image for Tracey.
2 reviews
September 17, 2023
I was recommended this book by a friend as an introduction to Marks writing. It was a perfect choice.
The book gives you a little of everything a touch of horror, romance, magic, mystery and time travel. Its hard to say much more without giving too much away, other than I thoroughly loved it and can't wait for the follow up.
Profile Image for A J Hawley.
3 reviews
January 24, 2019
A quirky surreal journey into the world of Eswiths a bar of no fixed location with patrons who aren't always what they seem.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews