In this wickedly dark comedy, Alice Thomas Ellis once again examines the lives of oddball outsiders, people who live in seemingly normal neighborhoods but who never quite belong to mainstream life there. Irene Wojtyla, the owner of Dancing Master House in Chelsea, is descended from Catholics who fled Russia and wandered across 27 lands and 30 countries before finally coming to rest in London, while her sister Berthe has landed Wales, where she is the Mother Superior of a convent. Irene, the adoptive mother of a tubercular and malicious nephew Kyril, has also been adopted by Focus, a white cat, who vainly attempts to vanquish the rat which constantly taunts and torments him.
When the sometimes psychic Irene agrees to take in a postulant from Sister Berthe's convent, the beautiful, black Valentine, who seems to have mystical powers, Irene casually reclaims the room she has illegally rented to "little Mr. Sirocco," leaving him homeless in order to provide a room for Valentine. A cleaning woman, Mrs. Mason, and the O'Connor brothers, who provide the household with horsemeat and stolen antiquities, add color and variety to the action in the household.
As these eccentric characters move almost randomly around London, the author shows the transcience of life and the strange acts of fate which change lives. Irene spends much of her time trying to avoid the tax man, Focus keeps trying unsuccessfully to catch the rat, Sister Berthe keeps waiting for an eternally fresh apple picked by Valentine to shrivel, Kyril keeps trying to figure out how to seduce Valentine, and death suddenly intrudes into people's lives. Ellis's study of good and evil incorporates the supernatural as much as traditional religion, giving a fresh view of man's place in the cosmos.
As always, Ellis's dialogue sparkles, her characters amuse, and her plot startles with its ironic twists and unexpected turns. Full of word play, literary jokes, and surprising imagery (the "clutching clamminess of seaweed" and the "cash-like clink of pebbles handled roughly by the dying waves"), the novel is full of humorous, sometimes satiric, observations: When a woman is hanged for killing her lover, Irene wonders what she is doing in a country, "where they wouldn't eat horses but they hanged their women." In describing the Book of Genesis, she comments that Genesis is "the only view that explained, for instance, mayonnaise." More wide-ranging and less tightly focused, thematically, than some other Ellis novels, 27th Kingdom is still vintage Ellis, a pure delight to read. Mary Whipple