Books I Like #8

A Madness of Angels by Kate Griffin

Orbit Books 2009

A Madness of Angels

By 10 a. m., Chapel Street Market already smelt of cheese, fish, Chinese fast food and McDonald’s. It was a market defined by contrast. At the Angel end of the street, punk rock music pounded out from the stall selling pirate DVDs; from the French food stall, more than half a van with a rumbling engine at its back, there sounded a recording of a man singing a nasal dirge about love, and Paris when it rained; at the cannabis stall (for no other name could do justice to the array of pipes, T-shirts, posters, burners, and facial expressions that defined it, everything on display but the weed itself), Bob Marley declared himself deeply in love to the passing hooded youngsters from the estate down at King’s Cross. Outside the chippy, where the man with inch-wide holes in his ears served up cod to the security guards from the local shopping mall, a gaggle of schoolgirls from the local secondary bopped badly in high-heeled shoes to a beat through their headphones of shuung- shuung-shuung-shuung and shouted nicknames at their passing school friends in high voices that didn’t slow down for the eardrum. Fishmongers chatted with the purveyors of suspicious rotting fruit, sellers of ripped-off designer gear gossiped with the man who sold nothing but size-seven shoes, while all around shoppers drifted from the tinned shelves of Iceland to the rich smell of the bakery, wedged in between the TV shop and the tattooists parlour.

Somewhere, I don’t know where, I found out about this British publisher’s daughter who got her first novel published when she was 14, named Catherine Webb. I may have looked up the author of this book, Kate Griffin, because I had been joking with a friend about how she was my cousin, and found Catherine Webb behind the pseudonym. She wrote that novel, Mirror Dreams over summer break from school. Her father read it, then advised her to find an agent, which she did.

The next year its sequel, Mirror Wakes was published, and she has continued to publish prolifically since. At the time I picked AMOF up, she had published 11 novels at the age of 25. She currently publishes under the name Claire North, and has published several wonderful books under that name.

The four books in the Matthew Swift series all inhabit the fringes of a magical London, dark and full of panoramic, almost hallucinatory imagery like the passage above. The story begins with Swift resurrecting out of thin air in the flat he had lived in before his demise two years earlier, sharing his newly-reconstituted body with what he calls “angels”: actual living beings brought to life in the telephone lines of London from the unfinished ends of telephone conversations, on a mission to find the person who murdered him.

The problem I see with the series is that over time, they begin to seem like copies of themselves, as Griffin (Webb) follows Swift on endless walkabouts through London, always with these long hallucinatory passages that never lose their immediacy. I suspect Webb just got tired of walking through London enough to create these descriptions: I certainly never got tired of reading about them.

The tone is noir and almost post-apocalyptic (in the way that we are all living in a nearly post-apocalyptic world these days) and the magic of these books is original and dark.