Wednesday, October 02, 2013

Three Brothers by Peter Ackroyd, review

A novel of three London lives is a camp, clever tour de force, says Mark Sanderson.

Peter Ackroyd, whose latest novel is 'Three Brothers'
Peter Ackroyd, whose latest novel is 'Three Brothers' Photo: Jason Alden / Rex Features

By
Harry, Dan and Sam Hanway were born – in successive years in the Sixties – on the same date and at the same time: noon on May 8. In other words, they are midday’s children. What they lack in brotherly love they make up for in a psychic connection that ensures they grow into “the strangest boys in the world”.
When their mother deserts them, their father, a failed writer turned nightwatchman, leaves the boys pretty much to themselves. The Camden lads never speak about this cataclysm, which hits young Sam the hardest. He spends his days and nights wandering the streets of London, seeing things that aren’t there, and working in a long-vanished convent. Meanwhile, Harry and Dan, both bitten by ambition, climb the greasy poles of careers in Fleet Street and Cambridge.
Anyone who knows anything about Ackroyd will immediately realise that all three boys are avatars of their creator. London made him and he has remade London in his own image. He even appears in a visitation Harry has in Limehouse: “A settlement of round huts, created out of mud and straw, had once been raised here by the river… The same sounds, and the same voices, had come from these frail huts… Now someone called out, 'Peter! Peter!’”
Three Brothers is an alternative autobiography, a ghost story and a murder mystery all in one slim volume. Dickens, Blake and Eliot – all subjects of lives by Ackroyd – cast shadows over the three-ply narrative that is full of chance and coincidence, “alliances and affinities”, “contenders and young pretenders”, shape-shifters and shirt-lifters.
Offended? Then this clever, camp novel – which includes a chapter titled “Sausage Land” – is definitely not for you. Indeed the only sympathetic character in the whole gallery of grotesques is a light-fingered rent-boy known as Spark or Sparkle. 
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