MRS BRADLEY MYSTERIES by GLADYS MITCHELL

I am on a roll with these British ladies of crime. My latest discovery is Gladys Mitchell (1901-1983). From 1921 to 1961 she worked full-time as a teacher…and also wrote over 66 Mrs Bradley mysteries. Even more than Agatha Christie! There were a few other books as well; such an amazing output over a very long career, which make it strange that she’s almost disappeared from view.

I can’t go too far into the plot of Speedy Death without introducing spoilers, however initially the set-up seems to offer nothing too unorthodox. Basically, it’s a classic country house mystery, with family and guests gathered at the house of Alastair Bing to celebrate his birthday. They are his adult daughter Eleanor (who still lives at home), his son Garde with his pretty fiancée Dorothy and best friend Bertie, explorer Mr. Mountjoy and friends Mr Carstairs and Mrs. Bradley. However things get weird very quickly. It’s enough to say that the victim Mountjoy, who was found dead in the bath, was not what he seemed.

The character of Mrs Bradley was familiar to me, because I’d watched a few episodes of a late 1990’s TV serial, The Mrs Bradley Mysteries,  starring Diana Rigg. Aristocratic and stylish, she was aided by a devoted chauffeur (Neil Dudgeon of Midsomer fame) and made crime-solving seem like a breeze. Her outfits were the bee’s knees in 1920’s chic; a bit like a mature Phryne Fisher, in fact. But that’s not the character Gladys Mitchell created. Psychoanalyst and amateur detective Mrs Beatrice Adela Lestrange Bradley is first described like this:

…dry without being shrivelled, and bird-like without being pretty. She reminded Alastair Bing, who was afraid of her, of the reconstruction of a pterodactyl he had once seen in a German museum. There was the same inhuman malignity in her expression  as in that of the defunct bird, and, like it, she had a cynical smirk about her mouth even when her face was in repose. She possessed nasty, dry, claw-like hands, and her arms, yellow and curiously repulsive, suggested the plucked wings of a fowl.

Bizarre! Especially those arms. Actually, she’s oddly endearing but as far away from Phryne Fisher or Jane Marple as you can imagine.

The Rising of the Moon (1945), written 16 years into the series, is a different kettle of fish. Not a classic crime or a ‘cosy’; in fact, it’s almost a ‘coming-of-age’ story embedded in a crime novel. I loved it. Though Mrs Bradley makes an appearance as an odd fairy godmother figure, it is two young boys, Simon and Keith Innes, who do the majority of the sleuthing. Instead of an arch and witty omniscient narrator, we have 13-year-old Simon telling the story.

We soon reached the river, which, in parts, became the canal, and all at once I began to feel horribly nervous. I set a quicker pace, and the way Keith followed close behind me convinced me that he, too, hardly relished the adventure.
The moonlight fell white on the grass of the open spaces, and in shafts of greenish yellow between the thin-leaved trees. The river gurgled and splashed, and every now and then it was as though furtive little creatures scurried between our feet among the grasses, or rustled in last year’s dead leaves. From a distant farm a dog began to howl.
‘Get a move on,’ said Keith. ‘We’ll never get home at this rate.’
‘Do you want to get home?’ I asked, my own teeth beginning to chatter.
‘Yes, I do,’ he answered. ‘It’s a beastly night to be out.’
I felt the same, and without another word, I broke into a run. Keith stayed just at my heels, like a long-distance runner who intends to let his rival make the pace. But we were not in rivalry. We were merely two children, suddenly stricken with panic, running away from ourselves…

Simon and his younger brother Keith have been orphaned, and live with their brother jack, his wife June, nephew Tom and lodger Christina in a crowded little house in a small riverside town on the Thames. The town is beautifully realised and you could probably draw a map is you were so inclined, because the boys are free to roam in and around the streets, lanes and alleys, and along the river, where there are towpaths, canals and bridges with river-folk dwelling in house-boats and on barges. They know the locations of all the pubs, shops and public buildings  and because it’s a small town, they know lots of the inhabitants, too. They’re especially friendly with the eccentric proprietress of a junk shop, who allows them to make a playground of her shop and ferret through her stock.

The boys’ life becomes darker when the circus comes to town, and a terrible murder is committed. Their pursuit of the Ripper-style killer carries with it the innocence of imaginative kids, avid readers who spend half their time as heroes in a a world of thrilling adventure, so The Rising of the Moon has hints of Gothic novels and Boy’s Own adventures, of Enid Blyton and Charles Dickens. But Simon and Keith also live in a believable household, with routines and meals and washing-up, with disagreements and family friction, so there’s a kind of social realism there, too. The love and loyalty between the boys is quite moving, as is their adoration (on Simon’s part, infatuation) with the kind and affectionate lodger Christina.

I’m keen to try more Mrs Bradley.

 

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MORE HOT-WEATHER MURDER

More Allingham, more hot-weather reading pleasure.

Mystery Mile (1930) is the second book featuring Albert Campion. In it we see an American judge arrive in England to escape repeated attempts on his life. Campion finds a safe haven for him and his two adult children with old friends Biddy and Giles Paget in their estate near Mystery Mile, a village on the Suffolk coast. It turns out not to be so safe, after all. Which is not really a surprise, is it?
The cast of characters include a crew of eccentric local country folk, a saintly vicar, a boring art expert, a sinister criminal mastermind and his gang, plus Campion, Lugg and group of lively young people. The action rockets between rural Suffolk and London; there are fights, escapes, murders and abductions. Campion, ably assisted by valet Magersfontein Lugg, reveals hidden depths beneath his silly patter and habitually vacuous expression. He’s a dark horse, that one.

I also read Look to the Lady (1931), The Case of the Late Pig (1937) and The China Governess (1962).

The first two are adventurous romps, with a blend of detection, suspense and giddy, often black, humour that I’m learning is classic Allingham. They were both high-spirited and fast-moving, veering off in unexpected and sometimes pretty weird directions, with Campion front and centre in the plot. The China Governess (1962) is a very different kind of book, set in a very different kind of Britain.

It was written near the end of Allingham’s career. I wonder if it is typical of her late work, because it’s very different to the earlier books. It’s slow-moving and dark rather than madcap, pacy and enjoyably weird and definitely not a romp.

It follows Tim, the adopted child of an unpleasantly condescending and emotionally repressed family as he searches for the truth about his parentage. A kind of Who Do You Think You Are in post-war Britain, set among housing developments and seedy suburbs as well as the more familiar ‘big house’. Allingham’s plot provides a constant interplay between past and present. New homes are built on top of old slums; Tim’s adoptive family deal in antiques; a Victorian murder and a WWII tragedy cast long shadows; Allingham explores issues of heredity v upbringing. The easily offended 2026 reader might need a warning, but it is of its time. (As an aside, my first job in 1977, with intellectually handicapped adults, was overseen by Mental Retardation Services).

It’s a dense, unsettling drama, with Campion a minor player, and though I enjoyed it very much, if you are looking for ‘classic crime’, this is not it.

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SWEET DANGER by Margery Allingham

Red sky at night, shepherd’s delight.
Red sky at morning, shepherd’s warning…

The camera in my phone can’t quite capture what the sky looked like at dawn on Wednesday last. It was really red, and quite ominous; the day was already warm. My home state of Victoria was sweltering through what turned out to be a week-long heatwave, with temperatures here in Castlemaine reaching 42.4.  It was almost 50 degrees in places like Mildura and Ouyen. Following on from the devastating fires in Harcourt, just down the road from us, it really did feel as if we were under siege.  The emergency app kept pinging with local fires but they were all small and rapidly under control; despite the extreme heat, there was relatively little wind to boost the danger.
It’s times like these that I realise how very, very lucky we are to have the volunteers of the CFA to keep us safe. Firefighters came from South Australia, too. Even from Canada. All I can really do is donate to the local fundraiser for the Harcourt community and think ‘Bless you’ when I see the familiar red trucks.

I was lucky also to have excellent air conditioning and lots of books to read when not obsessing about fires and heat. And I hit the jackpot with my first Margery Allingham, Sweet Danger. It was a cracker, and reminded me of all the things I enjoy about Joan Aiken’s books for children. It is inventive, imaginative, fast-paced, with a ridiculously complicated plot – and funny as well.  If you were after a conventional Golden Age crime novel, you would be bitterly disappointed, but I was delighted to get out of the libraries and drawing rooms and into the Suffolk countryside of villages, pubs, watermills, rivers, hills and fields and rivers, peopled with all kinds of characters and eccentrics.

We first meet the Allingham’s detective, Albert Campion, in a hotel on the French Riviera, where he’s posing as the Grand Paladin of Averna. Averna is not only a delicious Sicilian liqueur, but a small Balkan principality which, in the world of the book, is suddenly of strategic interest to Britain. Thus the British government is trying to track down the long lost proofs to its hereditary ownership. So are a gang of criminals masterminded by the elusive financier Savanake, who will – as they say – stop at nothing to gain control of Averna’s natural resources.
So far, so complicated. Next, we are in the village of Pontisbright, on the trail of the crown and deeds to Averna. Campion and his friends take lodgings at an ancient mill, making the acquaintance of the impoverished but aristocratic Fitton family  – the lovely Mary, feisty Amanda and the youngest, 16-year-old Hal. They are the last of the line that could inherit Averna – if only the crown etc could be found…

No spoilers. I don’t think I could manage a coherent precis of the plot, anyway. I am so looking forward to more of these; from the early 1930s to the 1960s, Allingham wrote 27 novels with Campion as the primary sleuth. Campion himself is an agreeably enigmatic character; I did read that it’s been suggested he’s a parody of Lord Peter Wimsey, but even if he is, he’s a great character in his own right.  Tall, thin, wearing large horn-rimmed glasses and a vacuous expression to hide his intellect, he’s given to inane chatter, silly jokes and sudden bursts of decisive action. His manservant/companion Magersfontein Lugg, an ex-con, is a wonderful comic foil.  And the heroine of this book, 17-year-old Amanda is a relief after the beautiful, rich and idle young ladies I’ve met so far in Golden Age land. She’s a feisty, outspoken, brave and clever young woman.  And she actually does something, unlike the beautiful, rich young ladies I’ve met so far – she’s an engineering and electronics wiz.  And potential love interest for Albert, when she grows up? He’s still mending a broken heard, but who knows.

I don’t rate books, but if I did – heaps and heaps of stars!

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A MAN LAY DEAD

After a brief visit with two of the lesser-known (lesser-known today, I mean; they were famous in their time) female authors of the so-called Golden Age of Detective Fiction, I am back to familiar territory with the so-called Queens of Crime: Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, Margery Allingham and Ngaio Marsh.

I started with the first book in Ngaio Marsh’s Roderick Alleyn series, A Man Lay Dead. I really, really wanted to like it, mainly because Marsh was a New Zealander and therefore almost one of us. But it was another English house-party murder, and I am basically over the upper classes.  Sigh.

As usual, the setting is a country estate with a grand house – this one is called Frantock Hall – at its heart. Its owner, Sir Hubert Handesley, is famous for hosting extravagant weekend parties and his collection of unusual, rare and stabby antique weapons. His guests are a thoroughly nice young journalist, Nigel Bathgate; Nigel’s philandering cousin Charles Rankin; Sir Hubert’s niece Angela; unhappily married couple Arthur and Marjorie Wilde; Rosamund Grant, who is in a secret relationship with the caddish Charles; and a Russian doctor, Dr Tokareff. Servants abound, but in this house there is, unusually, a Russian butler, Vassily.

The weekend begins with cocktails and dinner, after which Sir Hubert invites his guests to play the ‘Murder Game’ (a popular parlour game in the 1930s) in which a secretly assigned murderer ‘kills’ a fellow guest, who then have to deduce his or her identity.  Naturally, someone – the womanising Charles –  is really murdered. There are seven suspects, but every single one has an alibi, and Detective Chief-Inspector Roderick Alleyn of the Metropolitan Police is called in to solve the puzzle.

Roderick Alleyn is one of the ‘gentleman detectives’ who were so popular between the wars, only in this case, he is a professional policeman and not an amateur like Lord Peter Wimsey and Albert Campion. With his aristocratic family and background (educated at Eton, just like Boris Johnson!), he’s not your usual copper but at times he behaves a bit like an upper-class twit. It seems as if Marsh didn’t know quite what she wanted him to be in this first book. Marsh herself spoke critically of A Man Lay Dead, recognising that it had some serious flaws. The sub-plot featuring Bolsheviks, a secret Russian brotherhood and a priceless ritual dagger is simply silly and as for the ‘ingenious’ murder method…really?

Marsh went on to write 32 Roderick Alleyn novels, so I plan to read one of the later ones to see how he turns out.

Ngaio Marsh (1895-1982) was born in New Zealand, worked there as an actress and in 1928 moved to London to pursue her career. For the rest of her life she divided her time between the UK and her homeland. She wrote A Man Lay Dead after reading one of Dorothy Sayers’ novels, and thinking that she could do that, too. 

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CHRISTIANNA BRAND

Christianna Brand (1907-1988) published steadily for most of her writing life, from her debut novel Death in High Heels in 1941 to her last short stories for detective magazines like Ellery Queen’s in the early 1980’s. Her output spanned  detective fiction – including 7 in the Inspector Cockrill series – mysteries, romances and children’s books. She was a prolific short story writer for magazines, anthologies and collections; she published under her own and five different pen names. Nothing if not versatile! But she seems to be mostly forgotten today, except for her Nurse Matilda books, which served as the source material for Emma Thompson’s Nanny McPhee.

Heads You Lose (1941) was her first Inspector Cockrill book. It’s classic British crime. English house party, country estate, a cast of family, friends and servants, heavy snow and two particularly gruesome murders. As you might expect from the punning title, they are decapitations.

Stephen Pendock is the handsome, middle-aged squire of Pigeonsford, and an attentive, much-liked host. His house guests are an old friend, Lady Hart, with her twin granddaughters Francesca and Venetia as well as Henry Gold (Venetia’s husband) and another young man, now in the army, called James Nicholl. He’s been a frequent visitor to the neighbourhood since his youth. A village neighbour, Grace Morland, moons around the house yearning after Pendock, and her niece, actress Pippi Le May, pops up from London and visits the big house as well. I counted at least nine servants. Trotty, Miss Morland’s maid, and Bunsen, Pendock’s butler, are the most prominent.

Brand clearly enjoyed the puzzle aspect of the murder story. On the face of it, both  murders seem impossible. Several perpetrators are suggested; a possible scenario is proposed, investigated and discarded before the murderer is found. On this first outing, Inspector Cockrill seems undeveloped as a character, and it is the upper-class and privileged of Pigeonford who are most fully drawn.

Which could be a bit of a hitch for current day readers. The twins, Francesca and Venetia, are a couple of very spoiled young ladies whose Nanny should have put in the naughty corner more often. I think they are meant to be charming. But, for example, their insistence that their pampered dog be allowed into the inquest seems simply rude and their tangled emotions are sheer self-indulgence. I kept thinking, for God’s sake, people have been killed here. And there’s a war on!

In comparison to the Patricia Wentworth novels, these two books were more individual and better written – but less satisfactory. That’s because tone is wildly uneven; I kept being jerked out of the narrative by my strong reactions to Brand’s treatment of several of the characters. They are the outsiders, of course. The spinster Miss Morland is unmercifully pilloried for her failure to attract the man she loves; Pippi le May’s actressy glamour is cheap and not quite clean; we’re never allowed to forget that Henry Gold, Venetia’s husband, is a Jew and ‘not one of us’; the servants are inferiors to be patronised or laughed at.  I suppose if you are an insider, it’s OK. If not – it’s cruel.

I found the same issue – cruelty –  with Cat and Mouse.
It is a claustrophobic psychological thriller set in rural Wales. Journalist Tinka Jones arrives to visit one of her magazine’s advice-column correspondents – known only as ‘Amista’ –  a young Welsh girl. Letter after letter, like a serial story, Amista has told of her life on an isolated hilltop with her guardian, Carlyon, and his two servants. She details her daily life, the beautiful Welsh hills and valleys, her growing love for Carlyon, their sudden romance, his proposal of marriage, her great happiness… When the letters stop, Tinka is curious.

She finds a lonely and gloomy house, a Heathcliff-like owner, two servants and the news that no-one has ever heard of Amista. But if she doesn’t exist, how did she know so much about the house, the staff and Mr Carlyon? Why is the policeman, Mr Chucky (yes, really) keeping watch? When she is forced to stay the night, Tinka realises that there is another inhabitant. It is Mrs Carlyon. Is she Amista?  But the young woman has been in a car accident and is now terribly scarred, disabled, unable to speak. A dramatic scenario for a tense, creepy thriller. but…

…it was just so disturbing to read Brand’s descriptions of disfigurement. She uses the language of disgust; ‘monstrous ruin’, ‘muffled animal bleatings’, ‘an unrecognisable mask of a woman’, ‘incoherent gobblings and gruntings’, ‘a poor, shuffling, bowed creature’ with ‘pig-like eyes’. Tinka tries to act towards Mrs Carlyon with compassion but because the revulsion is so visceral, it’s tough reading. With other characters, too, there’s the same disdain for the lonely spinster, the vulgar and cheerful nurse, the uneducated Welsh servant.

I read crime novels to relax (yes, I know; it’s not quite right, is it?) a more conventional writer might be a better bet. I’m on to Ngaio Marsh next.

 

 

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CLOWN TOWN

What you see when you see a blank page is very much what you hear when you hear white noise; it’s the early shifting into gear of something not ready to happen – an echo of what you feel when you walk past sights the eyes are blind to: bus queues, whitewashed shopfronts, adverts pasted to lamp posts, or a four-storey block on Aldersgate Street in the London borough of Finsbury; where the premises gracing the pavement include a Chinese restaurant with ever-lowered shutters and a faded menu taped to its window; a down-at-heel newsagent’s where pallets of off-brand cola cans block the aisles; and, between the two, a weathered black door with a dusty milk bottle welded to its step, and an air of neglect suggesting that it never opens, never closes.

Mick Herron’s readers know immediately where they are; outside Slough House, home to Jackson Lamb and his crew of MI5’s duds and failures. They are known as the ‘slow horses’, and widely regarded in the secret service as a pack of bumbling, incompetent clowns. But they are Lamb’s clowns. Anyone who messes with them, messes with him, too. And for an overweight, out-of-condition, flatulent, nicotine-dependent, down-at-heel functioning alcoholic, he does a good job of dealing out retribution.

All the books are based on this premise, but so far, it hasn’t got stale.
In this instalment, the loathsome former politician Peter Judd – who must be modelled on Boris Johnson – and First Desk ice-queen Diana Taverner are duelling yet again. The action unspools from one small detail, a missing book in River Cartwright’s grandfather’s library. And that’s all I’m saying. No spoilers.

My older brother, who loaned me this one, tells me he rates Herron A+ – up there with John le Carre – because the writing, the characterisation, the dialogue, the setting, the back-stories, the plots all dovetail together seamlessly. No hitches or hiccups in the reading experience. Perfect examples of their kind. And with a kind of cliff-hanger at the end, there’s the extra pleasure in knowing that there are more Slow Horses to come.

 

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MISS SILVER

I’m heading into 2026 with my usual summer fare – crime novels. There’s something about a hot day and a murder…they just go together. A bit like a G&T.

I thought I’d do a little review of lesser known – today, at any rate – British female crime writers of the ‘Golden Age’ of detective fiction. The ‘Queens of Crime’ are usually given as Dorothy Sayers, Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh and Margery Allingham. But there were other prolific and popular writers and one of them, Patricia Wentworth, had her own elderly spinster detective. Maud Silver is a creation to rival Miss Marple, and I’ve just read four of them.

The Grey Mask was the first Miss Silver book and a riot of pulp fiction crime cliches – but perhaps they were new at the time. The book certainly whipped along, with a long-suffering heroine (didn’t she know that no one likes a martyr?), a masked criminal mastermind, a brooding hero – jilted by the heroine – just returned from several years exploring jungles, deserts and assorted uncivilised places and a supporting cast of dodgy servants. There was an idiotic but gorgeous heiress, a Bertie Wooster-ish best friend and a series of coincidences, lucky escapes and (spoiler) a thrilling last-minute rescue. I guessed the identity of Grey Mask early on, but it didn’t spoil the fun of following the twists and turns. Then there was the cool and professional way Miss Silver unravelled the whole plot.

Maud Silver is an elderly maiden lady, with a deceptively mild manner. A good listener, kindly, sympathetic, deeply principled and religious, a lover of Tennyson and Victoriana – but she differs from Miss Marple in that she is no amateur. Miss Silver is a businesswoman who runs her own detective agency. It operates by word-of-mouth and among the aristocracy and genteel middle class, she’s legendary for getting people out of scrapes and retrieving stolen letters and jewellery.

I enjoyed all of the  Miss Silvers I read – Grey Mask (1928), Spotlight (1947), The Ivory Dagger (1950) and The Gazebo (1955) – for their intricate plots, claustrophobic atmosphere, mild romances and perhaps above all their vintage English-ness. ‘Cosies’, they’d be called today – but in the last of these, Wentworth’s depiction of a selfish, manipulative mother and put-upon daughter was almost painful. I suppose it almost goes without saying that the reader will encounter in passing the racism, xenophobia, snobbishness, narrow-mindedness, class prejudice and sexism of the era. Wentworth and Miss Silver enjoyed a long career; the last in the series was written in 1961.

Patricia Wentworth was the pen name of Dora Amy Elles (1878-1961). She was the daughter of an Indian army general, Sir Edmond Elles, and Lady Elles. She grew up in India and was then educated in England. Her first husband was also an Indian army officer; when he died suddenly in 1906, she returned to England with her daughter and two step-sons. She remarried (another military man) in 1920, and dictated all her novels to her second husband.

She had instant success as a writer, though not in the crime genre, with her first novel A Marriage Under the Terror, set during the French Revolution. She wrote 32 Miss Silver novels, and over 40 other books.

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READING ROUNDUP

I do love Kate Constable’s annual Reading Roundup – thank you, Kate! Each year I plan to be more committed to record keeping, and each year I fail. My husband has set me up with a Goodreads account so I can keep a tally, but I have read six books so far this year and haven’t opened it yet. Doesn’t augur well, does it? However I would like to track my reading through the year. I have a few hunches; comfort reading probably peaks in winter, and my appetite for crime may increase with hot weather. We shall see.

By going back over my book group and library histories, plus my posts, I have pieced together a rough Roundup. The stats are:

57 books completed.

Of the books I actually read,
32  were fiction and
25 were non-fiction.
I generally didn’t count gardening, cookery and art books if I only looked at the pictures

15 were by Australian authors
27 were by UK authors
and there were a smattering of European and Japanese authors.

I only read 2 children’s books (!!!!) this year, which I find hard to believe…

20 books were from my own library,
of which 14 were books I bought this year.

I read 6 Kindle books, usually while I was travelling, but sometimes because I couldn’t borrow the book from the library or buy it cheaply.

I finished 24 library books this year, but I borrowed a lot more. For instance, I borrowed 33 novels that I didn’t finish. A few pages was enough with some of them. Which is why libraries are so wonderful!

The gender split was 38 female and 19 male authors.

The 2025 novels that have stayed with me are Samantha Harvey’s Orbital, The Bees by Laline Paull and Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner. And for non-fiction, Place of Tides by James Rebanks, Cider with Rosie by Laurie Lee and Somebody Is Walking On Your Grave by Mariana Enriquez.

 

 

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TYPING ONE-FINGERED

Typing one-fingered is VERY slow. My punishment for over-enthusiastic close-pruning of a wayward geranium – I pruned my fingertip.
So super-short posts until it heals.

I have read and enjoyed Bookish and Call for the Dead. And as Bugs Bunny would say, “That’s all, folks!”


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WILLIAM BLAKE AND THE SEA MONSTERS OF LOVE

...Blake left the great wen of London for the freedom of the sea.
It was as though he had been given a secret key. All the things you wish had never happened? AI and satellites playing pinball among the stars? All the ways we went wrong? Blake offered a remedy. He needed no opium, no drink or drugs or kites to attain such a suspension of doubt; he was there already, physically intoxicated by the incalculable hardship and glorious possibilities of life here on earth. He saw and felt this in his own body, incarnate in his flesh; in the planet spinning round the sun, the sea being tugged by the moon. He was an astro-priest launched into the unknown, ready to leave the shell of himself in the alien dust as the sun turned black and his spirit hurtled on.

Risingtidefallingstar (yes, all one word) from 2017 was my introduction to this writer and I was excited to see William Blake and the Sea Monsters of Love. Hoare is one of those people who write wonderful – to me, anyway – often strange, slightly bewildering combinations of genres. Here he traces the legacy of artist, poet, visionary and mystic William Blake through artists, film makers, writers, eccentrics, poets, war heroes, outsiders, outlaws. He goes back to Milton, Shakespeare and Sir Francis Bacon, and forward to Oscar Wilde, T.E.Lawrence and Derek Jarman in an unclassifiable tapestry of English history, biography, travelogue, memoir, nature writing, religion, spirituality and more.

Written in a passionate, lush, headlong style, the narrative goes in multiple directions and makes unexpected connections (how about William Blake, Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash?). It’s a wild ride. And so dense and intricate that I’m going to have to borrow it from the library again. And perhaps, again after that.

And did those feet in ancient time
Walk upon Englands mountains green:
And was the holy Lamb of God,
On Englands pleasant pastures seen!

And did the Countenance Divine,
Shine forth upon our clouded hills?
And was Jerusalem builded here,
Among these dark Satanic Mills?

Bring me my Bow of burning gold:
Bring me my arrows of desire:
Bring me my Spear: O clouds unfold!
Bring me my Chariot of fire!

I will not cease from Mental Fight,
Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand:
Till we have built Jerusalem,
In Englands green & pleasant Land.

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