“Lyrical and obscene, colloquial and rhapsodic." —The New York Times
First published in 1989, London Fields is set ten years into a dark future, against a backdrop of environmental and social decay and the looming threat of global cataclysm. As the dreaded Y2K approaches, Nicola Six, a “black hole” of sex and self-loathing, has chosen her thirty-fifth birthday, November 5, 1999, as the date of her own murder. Whom to manipulate into killing her is the question; her choice wavers between violent lowlife Keith Talent, who is obsessed with winning a darts tournament, and a dimly romantic banker named Guy Clinch. When Samson Young—a writer suffering from a long bout of writer’s block—stumbles upon these three, he believes he has found a story that will write itself.
A highly unusual mystery with an unexpected twist at the end, London Fields is also a corrosively funny narrative of pyrotechnic complexity and scalding moral vision.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
August 24, 2010 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780307743978
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780307743978
- File size: 3122 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
January 30, 1990
Amis has been writing dark, sardonically powerful novels ( Money ; Success ) over the past 10 years, but this hugely ambitious, apocalyptic vision of moldering lives in a London tottering on the edge of extinction leaps far beyond them. Relentlessly bitter, often brutally funny, hypnotically readable, it may also be quite opaque in places to an American readership. It is the convoluted tale of Nicola Six, a brilliant femme fatale convinced that she will be killed by one of two men she has brought into her life, men who are at once wonderfully created characters and figures strongly symbolic of two aspects of the British psyche: Keith Talent, scabrous petty crook, compulsive fornicator, racist and sexist, lost to all shades of human feeling except a passion for darts, a pub game at which he aspires to be a champion; and Guy Clinch, a hereditarily wealthy, well-mannered but terminally inhibited man whose basic decency seems irrelevant to the world of Nicola and Keith. There is also a narrator in the persona of the novelist himself; he writes actual chapters meditating on his characters and the progress of the story--interpolations which could have been fatal to the narrative but are so skillfully interwoven that they become part of its grim, headlong texture. There are also two charmingly portrayed babies--Keith's, an angelic, suffering little girl; and Guy's Marmaduke, a horrendously violent infant who eats nannies for breakfast--outstanding among a cast of Dickensian richness and variety. What may keep the book from being as successful on this side of the Atlantic as at home (it was for weeks Britain's No. 1 bestseller) is its density of British references--the language (Keith's is stunningly mimicked), the pub atmosphere, the London geography--and the palpable sense of doom Amis evokes for the city as the millennium nears and the sun sinks ever lower. But adventurous readers will be thrilled by the book's somber passion, its virtuoso style and daring range. -
Publisher's Weekly
April 1, 1991
In this very British tale, femme fatale Nicola Six manipulates racist, sexist scoundrel Keith Talent and well-mannered, naive Guy Clinch as an omniscient narrator/novelist spies on the trio in order to develop his book. ``Relentlessly bitter, often brutally funny, hypnotically readable, it may also be quite opaque in places to an American readership,'' said PW. Author tour.
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