The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Veteran adventurer faces his toughest challenge after stroke

- By Fiona Russell news@sundaypost.com Todonatevi­sit uk.gofundme.com/f/ move-mountains-formalcolm malcolm

A fundraisin­g drive has been launched to help a world-class climber left fighting for his life after a stroke.

Friends of Malcolm Bass have launched an appeal for £100,000 in a bid to give the 56-year-old the best chance of recovery.

Within days of the Gofundme “Move Mountains for Malcolm” initiative going live, support was flooding in – and after only a week, donations had reached almost £30,000.

Last week, Malcolm, who has made many first ascents in Scotland and of high-altitude peaks around the world, said he was “amazed and incredibly grateful” after hundreds of people pledged cash.

The money will pay for specialist equipment, as well as physical and occupation­al therapy, at a critical phase of his recuperati­on.

It was in August, without warning and with no underlying health issues, that the Montane-sponsored athlete suffered the devastatin­g stroke.

He had just spent what he called “two days of joyful climbing” in the Highlands with best friend Simon Yearsley. The stroke left the NHS clinical psychologi­st barely able to move, see or speak in a hospital bed in Dundee, before he underwent life-saving cranial surgery to relieve pressure on his brain.

His partner Donna James, who had rushed north from England to be with him, feared he wouldn’t survive. Malcolm was finally deemed well enough to travel home from Scotland to Yorkshire. However, his friends believe he is now facing his biggest challenge.

Simon, of Bankfoot, Perthshire, said: “The stroke flung an immensely fit athlete and adventurer into the abyss. Even as someone who has pushed himself to the limits of his endurance, he is facing the toughest challenge of his life.”

He swapped the glamour of the music industry in the Big Smoke to return home and chronicle the fictional mean streets of no mean city.

Alan Parks may have come late to crime writing but his series is tipped to become an enduring classic of tartan noir with his hero, detective Harry Mccoy, already been cited in the same breath as Rebus and Laidlaw.

But publicatio­n of the fourth novel in the Glasgow-set series – The April Dead, written in lockdown – is coloured by sadness as Parks, now 58, reveals his mother died just before Christmas.

And, on Mother’s Day, the author salutes Jean Parks, 87, for instilling in him his passion for Glasgow and says, without her influence, the series set in the city of his 1970s childhood may never have emerged.

The author – who moved back eight years ago – said: “My mum passed away just before Christmas. It was during Covid and she was in Erskine Care Home. It was a difficult period.

“Before Erskine she was in assisted living, that was around March, the last lockdown. You could go and wave in the window and that was really it. You were not allowed to go in because a lot of vulnerable live there. When she became less well she went to Erskine and they arranged for us to speak to her outside but she was in a wheelchair and she’d get cold. Erskine tried as hard as they could within the regulation­s to allow people to see their families, but it was very hard.”

Reliving the moment he and his older sister Janice Prowse, 63, said their painful final goodbyes, he told The Post: “At the end we could see her, but we had to wear PPE. It wasn’t the best situation. They had no Covid in Erskine but mum had dementia and it has a physical dimension. She just passed away.

“We were allowed to have 10 people at the cremation. My mum had a big family and she knew a lot of people – she was a very sociable person – so, although it was a perfectly nice ceremony, it was not the kind of funeral we expected. But you just have to roll with the punches in this situation.”

He remembered: “In the 1970s, when my books are set, I was 10. My mum was from Glasgow but we lived in Paisley. She had no interest in shopping there and every Saturday I’d get dragged off to Glasgow.

“I used to think it was a very glamorous place. I was excited. To me it was the big city. You’d see all sorts of different people, dressed-up young people, homeless people, rich people. I remember we used to go to Pettigrew’s and Frasers, the big department stores. It felt like another world.”

The writer says Glasgow, where the civic motto talks of a bird that never flew and a bell that never rang, has a glamour that never stopped fascinatin­g him.

He said: “That was what I wanted to put in the books. I always think Glasgow is represente­d as a bit one-dimensiona­l in fiction. So I wanted to make my fiction not just about this hard city, people battered down by life, and all that, but to try and say that – as much as now – Glasgow in the 70s had a lot of life and a had a glamour and excitement.”

His new book is set in April 1974 and the city is rocked by explosions. Mccoy wades in when a bomb maker blows himself up, with few remains left to identify him. Meanwhile, a retired captain ropes the detective into finding his son, a

A bustling Argyle Street in Glasgow in 1974, the decade when Alan Parks’

sailor missing from the US naval base on the Holy Loch. The search leads him to the people behind the bombs as another, bigger explosion heads Glasgow’s way.

Parks – whose 2017 debut, Bloody January, propelled him onto the internatio­nal literary crime fiction circuit and saw him shortliste­d for the Grand Prix de Litteratur­e Policiere, and whose third book, Bobby March Will Live Forever, was nominated for an Edgar Award – said of his new novel: “I wanted to write something about the American naval base. There used to be a submarine maintenanc­e base at the Holy Loch just down from Dunoon.

“The Americans came on these huge boats that had space to take their cars. So, suddenly in 1970s Dunoon you’d see these enormous Cadillacs with huge fins parked next to a wee Minis. The Americans all looked tall with good teeth, slightly different to the Scottish people. They built a little town with shops and a bowling alley, it was quite a strange thing really and interestin­g to write about. I liked the idea of having these transplant­ed Americans wandering about.”

Perhaps not surprising­ly, music pulsates through the pages of The April Dead. “I’ve put music in the books because a lot of musicians came from Glasgow

– like Frankie Miller. The Glasgow Apollo venue is in one of the books.

“I listen to the music of the time of the book and make a playlist of what is relevant. In the latest book, Abba has just won the Eurovision Song Contest. I think if you put in it that Waterloo is on the radio, people will remember that. The character Mccoy is complainin­g Abba is on the radio every five minutes. I’ve also been listening to some obscure Glasgow bands from that time.”

The former creative director of London Records and Warner Music says long nights in edit rooms working on music videos has imbued his writing with a sense of narrative and pace. He got into music scene when, as student of moral philosophy at Glasgow University, he met Lloyd Cole, who would form the Commotions. After graduating and without a job, he agreed to answer the band’s office phone in Glasgow while they were in London. It was a springboar­d to a 20-year music career.

“I commission­ed the artwork and the videos and the photograph­y,” he said. “Basically, you were trying to put the visual identity of the band together.” But the digital revolution and a subsequent collapse in the music industry led to redundancy and a return to Glasgow. Within days, however, bosses asked him to

go back part time. He wrote this first book on the five-hour train journeys to London.

But when he reached 54 he decided it was time to find another career. He said: “It’s not a good idea when bands are young enough to be your children. One band referred to me as ‘Uncle Alan’ and I thought that was time to stop.”

His former London Records colleague-turned-author, John Niven, had light-heartedly suggested he write a book. Parks said: “He was horrified when he found out I had. I wrote it for myself and put it in a drawer.”

Niven offered to read the novel, liked it and passed it to his agent, who didn’t. “I thought that was the end of that, but he handed it to best-selling author Sarah Pinborough who sent it to another agent,” he said.

Now with three books under his belt and the fourth about to launch, his name is bandied in literary circles alongside those of William Mcilvaney and Ian Rankin.

“It was Niven’s fault it got done,” laughs Parks. “I don’t know if he is happy about it or not, but there you go.”

Friends like Niven have been important to Parks in lockdown – he is single without children of his own, but counts himself lucky. “If you live on your own and write you are used to staring at your own space.

It is a job you’re lucky to have in Covid, it’s harder for someone who works in a restaurant or factory. And the music industry is in real trouble just now.”

The writer has had to cancel a string of internatio­nal book tours and festival attendance­s. And he admits: “I am missing having someone else make my dinner.

I am sick of cooking. I just want to go to a restaurant. I don’t care if it’s the worst restaurant in the world. My cooking repertoire ran out nine months ago.”

And Parks can’t wait to get back to his watering hole, the Mcmillan in Shawlands. “I used to go there a lot. I sound like a miserable git, but I’d sit at the bar and read the paper.”

Just now, though, he is looking for inspiratio­n for the next in the series, saying: “I tend to wander about Glasgow and find places I want to write about.

I have been up in Royston, so some of it might take place there,”

And what would his late mum make of his work? “When my first book came out she didn’t have dementia. She said she wished there was less swearing and violence in it. She would have preferred a nice story where everyone was happy.”

The April Dead by Alan Parks will be published by Canongate on March 25

 ??  ?? Bass on Beinn a Bhuird in the Cairngorms before his stroke
Bass on Beinn a Bhuird in the Cairngorms before his stroke
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Crime writer Alan Parks
Crime writer Alan Parks
 ??  ?? fictional crime series featuring detective Henry Mccoy is set
fictional crime series featuring detective Henry Mccoy is set

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