As clubbers in Manchester’s most notorious club partied hard in the 90s, a girl collapsed, falling from the stage after a bad pill.
Few noticed. Those that did, didn’t care, lost in a hedonistic haze.
John Black, an ex-SAS soldier, who was working security that night, carried her out in his arms.
Now on witness protection for exposing the city’s underworld after the girl’s death, he returns to the city that disowned him. Helping a troubled mother search for answers to her son’s suicide — as eerie recordings tell of increased sexual depravity in the block of flats he jumped from.
Confronting the orchestrator of his pains, he works to solve the case, have vengeance…and reclaim his lost identity.
I always know a great piece of writing by a great author because as a writer myself while I’m reading the damn thing I’m jealous as hell. Transference by John Bowie made me jealous A LOT. So many great lines followed by greater lines. Transference is a bleak, beautiful ode to Manchester.
John Bowie never disappoints. This is at least my third book of his to read and I've loved all of them. He's a natural storyteller, especially in this genre. Fitting he called his magazine Bristol Noir. Recommended!
John Bowie is best known for Bristol Noir, a terrific site where, in full disclosure, some of my writing has appeared (and I received a review copy of this book in hopes of an honest review). There’s a reason for that: a shared love of noir’s dark crystalline beauty. Transference distills that rich vein of noir and blends it with a pure Manchester poison. Too much can brutalise as his protagonist John Black knows. Like so many noir characters, he reluctantly heads back to the city that slapped him down for a final reckoning with the scars and bars he couldn’t put behind him.
As soon as I entered Manchester. As the smoke of the factories stung at my nose. He was in that band once. Now, he’s in another.
Three women look over his shoulder as he navigates the return to his haunted past. My favourite was his agent: ‘an ex-burlesque dancer, stage name M. Pampelmousse’ but there’s also a cop named Cherry, and emphasising the deep roots of the past, a therapist (there’s all kinds of juice in the book’s title). This is noir: their motivations may not be as clear as John believes, but he desperately needs to have faith in someone.
Fittingly for a book that knows where the border between Salford and Manchester lies, it’s suffused with the pulse of the music and familiar lyrics pop up in the prose and the chapter titles, running the gamut from Dice Man to Some Velvet Morning. This is a book for some whisky and a turntable. You can hear the crackle of needle on every page.
What a fabulous book, hard boiled crime meets poetic beauty - prose that is intoxicatingly hard to swallow and a story that has sharp edges, it’s like swallowing a jagged bottle that’s been used to glass you whilst reading.
‘If Bukowski wrote hard boiled crime it would be Transference’ - there are so many great writers that this book brings to mind, you have the dirty realism of Bukowski, Fante and McCarthy and the best noir writing from Raymond Chandler and James Ellroy.
It’s the second book in the Black Viking Thriller series but could also be read as a stand alone book, such is the brilliance of the writing - and with our protagonist and Bowie’s expert and masterful storytelling we have a series and a protagonist that we can enjoy for many outings to come!
A masterful series that has all the power of reincarnated greats of the genre - a must read! (Full review will be appearing in STORGY Magazine soon - then I’ll update this review).
Power, lies and corruption in the dying days of Mad-chester in the second instalment of John Bowie's dreamy noir series.
John Barrie/Black heads back to Manchester for a new case and to confront his past in a book that takes the author's first hand experiences of Manchester and Salford and throws them into the sometimes triple existence of his protagonist.
Anyone with an interest in British indie music from the 80s and 90s will pick up on many of the references within the prose and the song titles that double as the names of chapters.
It's at once a smashing noir story and a tribute to a moment long passed that lives on in history of the city. This is a blink and miss something type story written in poetic prose that stretches the elastic of noir and gives us a different kind of hero to root for.
John Bowie’s Transference is the follow up to his dark and moody debut novel, Untethered. Similarly soaked in booze and bad decisions, Transference follows its ex- SAS protagonist John B to Manchester where he investigates a young man’s apparent suicide, as well is digging up the dirt that most of the city would prefer to keep buried.
Transference is atmospheric and violent, a supernaturally tinged noir tale that casts a bloodshot and bleary eye over Manchester and its criminal fraternity. Brit Grit meets magic-realism.
You can order Transference from Red Dog Press, and you really should.
This book is the three D’s, dark - deep and dirty! It’s not for the faint hearted yet somehow manages to balance lyrical and poetic beauty with hard realism and violence which sometimes can make you uncomfortable. The book takes you on an underworld journey with the protagonist- every step of the sometimes ethereal way. I haven’t read another book like it and look forward to the next instalment!
A fantastic follow up to Untethered. Bowie’s writing is noir at it’s very finest and I was instantly absorbed into the backdrop of Madchester’s criminal underbelly. Transference leaves some of it’s predecessor’s dark humour behind and replaces this with 90’s indie nostalgia. I found the references to the music scene incredibly engaging so much so that it felt like saying goodbye to an old friend when I finished the novel. Fortunately I already have my hands on Division…
Transference is the follow up to Untethered by John Bowie and the 2nd book in the Black Viking Thriller series featuring John Black.
John Black as the title of the first book suggests is a man untethered from what you would consider society to be. He’s almost lost on his dark journey.
Ex SAS, and under witness protection, Black leaves that life in Bristol and returns to the City that shunned him, that broke him, the City he ran from - Manchester - to confront the demons that chased him away, the death of a young girl at a club and his part in the perpetrators being caught.
Facing the Big Guns of Manchester’s criminal underworld, Black descends into the darkest depths of himself as he faces his tormentors and indeed his own anguish.
John Bowie has written another mesmerising read that draws you in and leaves you feeling dirty and almost out of breath as he pens this brutal, lyrical, visceral tale.
The writing is quite stunning yet the tale is grim, stark and bleak.
Angry, Brooding, Dark and Gritty it’s pure Havoc, It’s Noir at its very best, written by one of the best.
A boozy, dreamlike followup to 'Untethered', John Bowie once again takes readers on a stuttering and haphazard investigation through grimy bars and a moody urban underbelly. There's something intoxicating about Bowie's prose and the hazy journey of the narrator, and the auto-fiction element of this series is fascinating. A quick and disorientating read, and a lovely slice of gritty noir.