In this ten-week series of posts I'll be drawing in literary fiction, popular fiction, graphic novels and non-fiction to create a reading list as disparate and inspiring as London itself.
The 10 titles are linked in so much as each one features at least one London location – each post will also feature a map to one of the locations
Daily Constitutional Editor Adam writes…
This week I'm standing up for a great thriller and a great Londoner. I'm also adding locations from the TV adaptation of this work, one of my very favorite London books of all
Len Deighton (1978)
This work combines two of my favorite things: London and alternative history fiction.
As a Londoner Len Deighton always gives the Big Smoke a leading role in his works. Whether it’s in his anti-Bond spy novels told by a nameless narrator (“Harry Palmer” in the movies, The Ipcress File, etc) or his highly personal and utterly fascinating work of non-fiction London Dossier (1967), the capital always features as a character in her own right.
In SS-GB, his “alternative history” novel set in 1941, London is seen as never before – or rather, as never was. And it is a chilling view.
The SS are in residence at Scotland Yard; King George is in the Tower; Churchill has been executed. London is in ruins. And the details in the bomb-blasted backdrop are vivid and startling to any Londoner.
In one scene, our hero, D.I Archer (now in the employ of the SS) takes a short cut into Soho through the wreckage of the Palace Theatre – meanwhile, the Metropole music hall on the Edgware Road is still standing.
These snapshots of an alternative London leap out of a characteristically compelling Deighton narrative, buttressed by his trademark meticulous period research. A great thriller and a most memorable London novel.
I added Ian Fleming's Moonraker to our reading list earlier this week, and a jolly good read it is, too. I notice that Fleming's Bond novels are now published as Penguin Modern Classics. For all the fun of the Bond books, Fleming was, to my eye, rather a clodhopping writer and I can only assume that this "classic" status is a marketing ploy to exploit a devoted following of Bond fans.
Fleming isn't half the thriller writer that Deighton is, and has none of his wit. Deighton may not have gone to the same school as Prime Ministera, and so perhaps lacks acolytes in the world of publishing to put his case forward for "classic edition" status, but he remains a living London treasure and, to this correspondent, one of the very best thriller writer these islands have yet produced.
This is London
(1959)By Miroslav Sasek
Post Script…
Back in 2017 SS-GB was filmed for the BBC – to poor reviews, I'm sad to say. I for one, as a fan of the book, loved the look of the TV version.
Len Deighton's thriller gave London a starring role.
And so it was in the TV version.
It was a brilliant job from all concerned in the production department recreating and reimagining London.
The last remaining Spitfire swoops down over Whitehall…
Buckingham Palace laid waste…
Parliament conquered…
The SS in Scotland Yard…
At first I thought it was Freemasons' Hall in Covent Garden standing in for the interior of the old Scotland Yard, and at the time I blogged thus. I was then contacted by Edward Millward-Oliver, an authority on the works of Len Deighton, who informed me that the interior for Scotland Yard was actually the old Central St Martin's building on Southampton Row WC2. Thanks Edward!
The flats, where Chief Superintendent Archer lives are, according to IMDB, at Blythe House, Blythe Road, West Kensington and also feature in TV series The Crown and Marvel movie Thor (!).
Kensington Gardens features in a scene where our lead character, Scotland Yard detective Douglas Archer, meets his Nazi boss Kellerman. Kellerman is out riding the imprisoned King George VI's horse…
The Jerusalem Tavern in Clerkenwell plays the role of the Two Brewers…
… and the old Hornsey Town Hall in Crouch End…
… is used as SS commander Huth's center of operations.
I've added a few more locations from the book, too. Here's the map so far, with more locations to be added as the series progresses…
Click the button below to book a place on one of my scheduled public tours…
(The edition shown is the 1980 Panther paperback.)
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