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King of the City
  
King of the City (Hardcover)
by Michael Moorcock (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  (6 customer reviews)

Availability: Available from these sellers.

15 used & new available from £1.69

Product details
  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Scribner (2 May 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0684861437
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684861432
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2,195,846 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
    (Publishers and authors: Improve Your Sales)

Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
Michael Moorcock at his unbeatable best: King of the City is a thunderous 400-odd page salvo that is another great London novel as well as a scarifying picture of excess and corruption, seen through the eyes of sleazy photographer Denny Dover. For those who relished Moorcock's massive (and massively entertaining) novel Mother London and enjoyed his epic literary novel Gloriana, King of the City will be manna from Heaven.

Since the demise of Princess Di brought about a change in the English soul, the new thinking has kicked tabloid paparazzi photographers like Denny out of work. He fetches up in the benighted wastes of Skerring on the south coast of England, only to sink into dreams of his days as a substance-abusing, sexually omnivorous rock star and existential maverick. Denny is galvanised when his childhood friend, massively wealthy magnate John Barbican-Begg, proves that rumours of his death are greatly exaggerated. Denny has to deal with both his collusion in Begg's avaricious ambitions and--far worse--the apparent seduction of his beautiful cousin Rosie. Comparisons with Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities will be thrown up but although this shares the same glittering surface (and is couched in language that is similarly elegant, demotic and malignantly witty), Moorcock essentially concentrates on four characters rather than the more scattershot approach of Wolfe. This is a shame, as Moorcock could have fleshed out some of the minor characters. No matter: for those who lived through the 1960s, this will be the definitive document. For those too young to remember it, a trip in this particular time machine will plunge them into a dizzying and phantasmagoric world in which anything goes.

The treatment of modern Britain is equally vivid, etched with a razor-sharp scalpel. The mixture of fictional and real-life characters is brought off with the kind of panache we have come to expect from Moorcock and the more serious issues he takes on (imperialism, greed, personal integrity) are perfectly integrated into the Dickensian canvas. But, finally, it is the language that will soon have people quoting wholesale from the book:

The one big lesson American consumerism taught Europe is how to strip your own psychic assets. How to sell your self-respect in return for a handout and the chance of a class-action court case. How to squeeze a handsome buck out of a murdered ancestor, maximise the profit on your birthright ... now we're all plodding through the same toxic haze of urine, grease, carbon monoxide and degenerated plastic that has eaten away the city's deregulated gilt and left us coughing up crap.
--Barry Forshaw

Synopsis
Denny Dover is now out of work and moving to the wastes of Skerring to lick his wounds. A former rock star and existential maverick, this East End lad-made-good lived it up with the best. But his childhood friend Sir John Barbican-Begg (deceased, allegedly) is resurrecting events from the past.

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star: 100%  (6)
4 star:    (0)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars King of the Bookshelves, 15 May 2001
By A Customer
I did not buy this when it came out last year because the review I had read had suggested it was hard to read. I bought the new paperback last week and have just finished it. Wow. It isn't hard to read, but it leaves you with a lot to think about. This is a great story, wonderful characters, but really interesting view of the world which is anti-consumerist, but not anti-capitalist. Some awful traditional recipes which sound worse than jellied eels! Others sound scrumptious. Even to a vegetarian! The analysis is new to me, though it might be more familiar to sociologists and similar types, and I found it very attractive, human, realistic. The writing is hard-hitting but intelligent and not at all an anarchist rant. A great love story. A moral fable, too, I think. I like the paperback cover better, too! A nice match for the Mother London paperback. This is the London I grew up in and seems to be vanishing by the day sometimes. Marion H.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great warm-hearted novel, 24 May 2000
By A Customer
I am not a total Moorcock fan. Somehow I've never been able to engage with his fantasy novels, though I'm sure they're very good. But I thought The Brothel in Rosenstrasse was outstanding in the way in interwove relationships mirroring the political situation. I also enjoyed Behold the Man, which is one of the few sci-fi novels I've read. But I really loved this new book. I got so involved with all the wonderful characters and scenes, the boxing match, the Red Mill, Tubby Theakston, Monsieur Fromental, Maddy LaFont, Pinky and Flo Fortnum, Norry Stripling and a more. It is a very warm-hearted novel. I found the subtle love story between Denny and Rosie very satisfying. Complicated relationships run throughout the book. There are lots of things going on in this novel, lots of places, lots of arguments, lots of moral questions and interpretations and it seemed to me that Tubby's big party, which forms a sort of off-centre hub around which all other events take place, with its cast of thousands of real and invented characters, is equal to the very best Victorian fiction, while remaining firmly concerned with important modern issues. This is a book I shall re-read as often as I have read Mother London. Theres no doubt that Moorcock stands head and shoulders above his contemporaries. Angela Carter was his only equal. If only there were a few more like them.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Moorcock at the top of his form., 21 May 2000
By A Customer
It wouldn't be exaggeration to compare this extraordinarily rich book to Dickens, Balzac or even Andrei Biely, author of 'Petersburg'. These were writers who took the dizzying tapestry of metropolis life for their canvas, its cast of thousands and blend of high drama and low; now Michael Moorcock has set himself among his great forbears once again with one of his favourite subjects, London.

His earlier 'Mother London', considered by many to be his masterpiece, showed the density of the city's history, stories and lives piled in endless layers (quite literally when it came to the scenes in the Blitz). 'King of the City' by comparison shows us the noise and energy of the surface, the capital as a hustling, vibrant universe-in-miniature, a place of spivs, chancers, racketeers, careerists and, in the background, ordinary people trying to get through life the best they can. The book follows the exploits of Denny Dover from his childhood in the bomb-ruined back streets through the city's Swinging heyday in the 60s to his rise as a leading paparazzo in the 80s and 90s, when the spivs had names like Murdoch, Maxwell and Thatcher (all embodied here in the sinister figure of Sir John Barbican Begg, another of the author's great, memorable villains). Art (well, rock music...), culture and politics all blend together in a heady, gumbo-like brew. Like the novelists of old, this book has an epic sweep, covering a span of fifty years (the same span as the author's amazing career) and seeking to encompass all that's worth communicating about what, these days, seems to be the only city worth writing about. As one of Dover's employers might put it: "All human life is here".

T