'It makes me angry that we have so many boarded up buildings and shops that have stayed in that state for years, and yet rather than investing money in a homeless shelter or doing something about the situation, we get yet another up-market, trendy bar that we don’t need...'
What’s
your name?
Katie Slade
What do
you do?
I am the Rights, Marketing and Events Manager at
independent short fiction publisher, Comma Press. I got hired in September
2011, so I’ve been there just over a year now. Before landing this awesome role
I worked at the Odeon for around four years, first as a team member, then as a
supervisor, and I temped a little in the admin office, to support myself
through university. Now, thanks to Ra Page and Jim Hinks, I never have to say,
‘Would you like an Odeon Premiere Club Card?’ ever again.
Where do
you live?
City Gate apartment blocks in Castlefield. My
street is just after the little bridge, over the canal with the barges and the
geese who attack anyone who tries to cross the grass.
Tell us
the story of how you ended up in Manchester.
I was born in an area called Sidcup in Kent, but
moved to Derbyshire with my mum when I was eleven. Living in the peaks may
sound nice but I lived in a small town called Chesterfield where everyone was
related and lived next door to the same people for about fifty years.
Entertainment and nightlife were pretty much non-existent, so when I reached
the end of my A-levels in 2007, I thought, ‘Fuck this’ and decided to go to a
university that was far enough away that I could be independent, but not so far
so that my mum would feel abandoned. I honestly can’t remember why I picked
Manchester – I guess it just made sense at the time. I just wanted to be
somewhere where there were actually things to do, and I could go shopping
without bumping into half the neighbourhood.
I’d
already made up my mind to stay permanently by the time I graduated, and I’d
already applied to do a two-year MA course, so my boyfriend and I finally moved
in together and made our own home in Manchester. I think my mum is still
holding out hope that I’ll move back to Chesterfield but I’ve been slowly
easing her into the reality that there is no way that will ever happen. My old
room is still the way it was when I left home five years ago!
I
can’t honestly say I love Manchester but it’ll do for now. Plus my work is
here, so I’ll just have to see where the future takes me.
What’s
great about this city?
The literary scene is vast and varied, and
everyone knows each other within these circles, so it feels like a very
friendly, supportive and inclusive community. There are always literary events
going on, whether it’s a poetry slam, a short story reading or a book launch,
and with so many cultural venues within walking distance, you’re never too far
away from something. We also have some of the top literary names living in our
midst – Jeanette Winterson, MJ Hyland, Carol Ann Duffy, to name a few. There
are also lots of photographers, artists and film-makers either bred or
developed in Manchester, so you can usually find someone to do a top quality
job on whatever it is you want making.
Also,
from my own personal perspective, there are three major theatres right on our
doorstep, which means whenever a show I want to see is on tour, I don’t have to
travel miles out of the city to see it. I can go enjoy the West End’s finest
without having to walk more than half an hour. And the tickets are probably far
cheaper than you would pay in London.
It’s
the same with touring bands. A few years ago, I got to see one of my all time
favourite bands who had come all the way from California, for just £12. It was
at the Academy so I easily walked there and back and got right up close to the
stage. It was incredible.
Finally
– the city has a diverse, multicultural population. When I worked at the Odeon,
I met people from all over the world, people who are still my friends now.
Meeting people with different native tongues, experiences, cultures and
backgrounds, people who can show you interesting things, introduce you to new
food (and do the odd translation for me here and there!) is a wonderful thing. Especially
when you grew up in such a repetitive, monotonous community where people are
suspicious of anything beyond their own county.
Oh
yeah – and the Gay Village. In a lot of places you can just wear your jeans and
trainers which is perfect for me.
What’s not
so great?
I’m going to sound like a right asshole now, but
you asked me to be honest, so three things…
The nearest bowling alley is Didsbury – what’s
that all about? Even Chesterfield had a bowling alley...
It seems very corporate. Everywhere you go it’s
loyalty cards and brand names and overpriced food. It’s either restaurants or
trendy bars, and very few normal, down-to-earth cafes where you can just order
something like toast, or pubs where you can just chill without having ciabatta
with goats cheese and organic hummus, skinny jeans and TopMan cardigans shoved
in your face. Even the Northern Quarter, which I thought was cool when I first
moved here as a naïve eighteen-year-old, is starting to get on my nerves. I’m
writing this on a train coming back from Brighton, and there you couldn’t move for
independent, family-run cafes and shops. Sure, they had all the other stuff like
Boots and Costa and H&M, but brands were outnumbered by an emphasis on
local produce and local business. For me, Manchester is either about
corporations or trendy places which try to pass themselves off as down-to-earth
and independent, but are actually stupidly expensive or pretentious.
I can’t get to work or back without being
bothered by someone who wants what little change I have in my pocket. I don’t
mind Big Issue sellers, I regularly
buy the magazine, but the amount of beggars in the city centre alone seems to
have tripled in the last few years, the situation seems out of control. I know
this sounds horrible, but it’s not as if I’m wealthy, and every week I lose
pretty much all the change I have in my purse to get myself bread and milk and essentials,
just because I feel too guilty to say no – even though these people tell you
the same story every week, somehow afford new trainers and mobile phones for
the next time you see them, and hurl a torrent of abuse at you if you tell them
you don’t have anything to give. It makes me angry that we have so many boarded
up buildings and shops that have stayed in that state for years, and yet rather
than investing money in a homeless shelter or doing something about the
situation, we get yet another up-market, trendy bar that we don’t need. I don’t
know anything about government but I’m sick of dreading the walk to and from
work, and I wish I could see evidence of someone doing something about it.
Do you
have a favourite Manchester building?
I don’t know if I have a favourite but I’ve
always liked the faded grandeur of the Palace Hotel on Oxford Road. There’s
something about the clock tower and the green domes on the top that make me
think of people going there to dance and court each other in the 1940s and
stuff. I imagine years ago it was the height of class and glamour.
Do you
have a favourite Mancunian?
Emmeline Pankhurst. And Jeanette Winterson. A
bit of both.
What’s
your favourite pub/bar/club/restaurant/park/venue?
The Footage. Poptastic. Baa Bar. The Lowry.
What do
you think is missing from Manchester?
A bowling alley.
If I was
Mayor for a day I would …
Have the Urbis building knocked down. It’s ugly.
Who else
would you like to nominate to answer this questionnaire?
I should probably say Jim Hinks as I don’t want
him to feel left out – but equally I don’t want it to look like favouritism for Comma, so I will also
nominate Mike Garry.
Comma Press are publishing Adam Marek’s The
Stone Thrower, Pawel Huelle’s Cold
Sea Stories, David Constantine’s Tea
at the Midland, Jane Rogers’ Hitting
Trees with Sticks, Guy Ware’s You
Have 24 Hours to Love Us, Bio-Punk: Stories from the Far Side of
Research, and the BBC
International Short Story Award 2012 anthology this autumn. Check out
our website for more details and launch events! www.commapress.co.uk
2 comments:
"I can’t honestly say I love Manchester but it’ll do for now. Plus my work is here, so I’ll just have to see where the future takes me."
"What’s great about this city?"
Great juxtaposition, lovely stuff.
I think it helps a lot in saving money...
Post a Comment