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Party drug at center of Beauman's new novel

By Reuters In New York | China Daily | Updated: 2015-04-22 08:39

Since his 2010 debut, novelist Ned Beauman, 29, has established a reputation for clever plots replete with memorable characters, vivid prose and some odd medical conditions.

His third novel, Glow, follows Raf, a young Londoner with a rare sleep disorder who loves raves and pirate radio. He stumbles into a bizarre global corporate conspiracy, including amateur chemistry, eerily intelligent foxes and missing Burmese immigrants, that revolves around a mysterious party drug.

How did this story come about?

I was thinking about what I was interested in that hadn't been covered very widely, and one of those things was pirate radio in London, and the other thing was corporate imperialism of the kind that I'd read about in The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein. I was looking for a way to connect those two things, and an obvious intermediary was drugs, because pirate radio is linked to raves, which are linked to drugs, and a lot of corporate malfeasance takes place roughly in the Golden Triangle, where most drugs come from.

What themes did you want to explore?

I think the deepest philosophical theme is how pleasure can tell us something about consciousness. I'm interested in the philosophy of mind, and it's always seemed to me that pleasure and pain and our experiences might be the key to advancement on our understanding of what consciousness is.

How much did you draw on your personal experiences?

I have had a lot of the same experiences as Raf does in the sense that I was in my early 20s in South London at the same time he is. And I think I gave him quite a lot of my way of apprehending the world and a lot of my fascinations.

 

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