Monday, December 9, 2013

2013 read #150: Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd.

Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd
217 pages
Published 1985
Read from December 8 to December 9
Rating: ★★★★ out of 5

Seductive, almost gleeful evil, lustful revulsion at the stink and "corrupcion" of human existence, shadows and dust and blood -- the tale of a paranoid architect laying in a symbol and invocation to occult powers in the churches of London, with the help of a few human sacrifices, and the parallel tale of duplicates or echoes or metempsychotic rebirths of those characters, the architect now a detective in the twentieth century investigating murders mirroring the old sacrifices in the churches around London. Repulsively beautiful, filled with the fecal lust of a chaste hypochondriac, Ackroyd's descriptive powers slither and stroke and foul through the Georgian-set chapters in a wonderful evocation of period-perfect prose and exquisite characterization. The modern day chapters aren't as compelling after the first two parallel victims are dispatched; Hawksmoor the detective has potential as a character but sags under thematic expectations, shuffling inertly where his pseudo-historical doppelganger (inspired loosely by architect Nicholas Hawksmoor) twists and strangles and dominates his narrative, Ackroyd at the audacious height of his history-glutted powers. Maybe detectives and murders aren't my favorite genre staples.

The history of literary speculations around the historical Nicholas Hawksmoor, before and after this book, is pretty interesting, at least as Wikipedia sets it out. One early "promoter" of the occult geography of London (perhaps the one who originated Hawksmoor's position in the myth, though Wiki is vague about this) was Iain Sinclair, whose poem "Nicholas Hawksmoor: His Churches" inspired Ackroyd. "Both Sinclair and Ackroyd's ideas in turn were further developed by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell in their graphic novel, From Hell," says Wiki, "which speculated that Jack the Ripper used Hawksmoor's buildings as part of ritual magic, with his victims as human sacrifice." I haven't read (or seen) From Hell, but I can see how this book is part of that lineage of ideas. It's neat to see how the literary milieu of "occult London" arose and developed over time, to the point where now it (or its variations) feels like a go-to cliche in, say, steampunk.

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