Spike Magazine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spike Magazine [1] is an internet cultural journal which began in 1996, the creation of editor Chris Mitchell in Brighton, England. Updated monthly, its motto is "picking the brains of popular culture", though it tends towards the more intellectual end of the scale of this subject.

The focus of the magazine is mainly literary, and it features an extensive and eclectic back catalogue of book reviews, all available from the site's front page. It also includes features on a variety of subjects (including cinema and politics), music reviews, interviews, and the ongoing "blog" journal Splinters which is usually updated daily (and which in turn joins five other leading UK literary blogs to form the "Brit Lit Blogs" conglomerate [2].)

Spike has had contributors from around the world over the years making for very varied outlooks. The general tone however tends towards the counter-cultural, controversial and left-wing, with a frequent championing of lesser-known writers. Nonetheless, Spike has managed to obtain interviews with a variety of big-name authors over the years, including J G Ballard, Will Self, Jeff Noon, Iain Banks,Hubert Selby Jr, Gitta Sereny, P J O'Rourke, Quentin Crisp,Nick Hornby and Julie Burchill.

It contains separate sections devoted to news on Ballard, Noon, Self, and Irvine Welsh.

Some of the main writers over the years have been Chris Mitchell himself, Stephen Mitchelmore, Ben Granger, Ismo Santala (the former three also having been regular contributors to the Splinters blog), Chris Hall, Gary Marshall, Eric Saeger, Ian Hocking, Robin Askew, Nick Clapson, Jayne Margetts, Craig Johnson, Katrina Gulliver, Nathan Cain, Nick Clapson and Adam Baron. A book compiling some of Spike's best writing is currently being put together.

[edit] External links

[edit] Independent Spike Media Profiles