This concordance is based on Ballard's published books together with various uncollected pieces. Completed in 2008 and thought to be the first ever full concordance of a living author.
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Ballard described his exquisite short work The Index as the story that was the greatest intellectual challenge to write. The Index suggests that the book it belongs to has been lost. I have imagined the original text, but the censor has again managed to redact the parts not mentioned in the index!
You can buy the hardback from Lulu
The Ballard Interview Concordance
With over 350 interviews, this concordance provides an unprecedented insight into Ballard's thinking and artistic process.
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In Ballard's short story Studio 5, The Stars, he imagines a
computer that can produce poetry without pain. In 2018 I set up a Ballardian
'artificial intelligence' to do the same
Ballard was always an intensely visual writer and in the novel High-Rise he gave detailed descriptions of the tower block itself and the floor locations of nearly a hundred residents. Using SketchUp I created my own vision of the tower block and its denizens.
Inspired by Ballard's inherent playfulness and my grandkids subversion of the blocks, I imagined a scene from each of Ballard's novels as a Lego diorama. See if you can name them all.
Interactive Fiction makes concrete the postmodern trope of the reader creating the fiction; and The Terminal Beach is the most postmodern of stories. In order to complete my online version of the story you must become Traven, inhabiting the mind of this increasingly disturbed survivor of the modern world. Cheat sheet here if you get stuck.
This site is building a collaborative online catalogue of the 'Invisible Library' that fed Ballard's uniquely fertile imagination. It includes the books and other written materials that Ballard talked about reading, the items in his home library and the many books he reviewed.
Ballard's Experiment in Chemical Living
The scientific, technical and imaginative motifs that shape the very essence of what we’ve come to know as 'Ballardian' were in no small part forged in his five-year stint as deputy editor of this technical journal.
Rick McGrath's Terminal Press has produced an invaluable series of anthologies packed with facts and fabulations about Ballard. I contributed 'JG Ballard in the Dissection Room' to the 2013 edition and 'Mind-Mapping The Terminal Beach' in 2014.
An interactive map of 550 of the locations JG Ballard mentioned in his fiction, together with links to the relevant text. This demonstrates Ballard's canvas was indeed global.
In the introduction to this short story, Ballard suggests: "Readers hoping to solve the mystery of the Beach Murders ... may care to approach it in the form of the card game..." I have turned it into a Twine hypertext game.
One of the key scenes in JG Ballard's novel Crash is
set at the Road Research Laboratory — but what might the crash
test dummies involved have made of it?
"During the few seconds before his crash he clutched at the whiplashing spokes of the steering wheel, dazed by the impact of the chromium window pillar against his head." Now, thanks to Google Street View, we can follow Maitland as he crashes onto his Concrete Island.
The young Ballard was fascinated by Bridge and the older Ballard was equally fascinated by Time magazine. I've combined the two with appropriate Ballard quotes, click on them to reshuffle.
I've made a JG Ballard AI using Ballard's real answers from more than 300 interviews, translated into 50,000 lines of code and hosted by Pandorabots. The Ballard-bot is waiting to answer your questions . . .
JG Ballard in the Dissecting Room
Ballard noted in his autobiography: "Nearly sixty years later, I still think that my two years of anatomy were among the most important of my life, and helped to frame a large part of my imagination." I wrote about my own experiences of medical school and also compared some of Ballard's output with the dissection manual he used. You can also see a complete copy of his Cunningham's Manual (100MB).
My third Twitterbot used to spout chains of Ballard-like text based on his 'urban' novels, until X happened.
"It's a little as if I were leading the reader to a deserted laboratory, and that I put a collection of specimens and all the necessary equipment at his disposal. It's his job then to relate these elements together and create reactions from them."
JG Ballard, interviewed by Robert Louit, 1974.
Out of a deep respect for JG Ballard's work and a desire to carry out some of those experiments he speaks of, I've been interpreting his work using a variety of digital tools. Some of the results are shown here.
Mike Bonsall - September 2017