Like a stubborn knot in a piece of string, this novel takes a good deal of unpicking. But once you attempt to figure out what is happening you realise that the plot is not where the joy of this novel lies. A loose series of investigations occasioned by the death, and possible murder, of a wealthy man provides the excuse for the many diversions, asides and ruminations in which Themerson revels. The extent to which you will like his writing is entirely dependent on your tolerance for continually leaving the main road to check on what might be down a lane-way or a path that leads into a clump of trees. Here's a pretty typical example:
"She looked like a school-teacher, and everything she said was half grief and half annoyance. And half...or should I say a third? or a fifth? to be precise. a fifth of grief, a fifth of annoyance, a fifth of bitterness, a fifth of suspicion and a fifth of jealousy, but whether they were exactly one fifth I don't know, nor what they were fifths of, nor what the whole was that they were fifths of, you know how to apply your arithmetic to adding up the customer's bill and that's the end of it; nobody has told you, and you don't know, whether it makes sense to apply fractions to things that have no length, no weight, but only duration, like love, for instance-you can give your love to five hundred or a thousand persons, like the loaf of bread Jesus gave to the people He liked, and each will receive your full love; on the other hand, to some other person, you can give only one twelfth of your love, no more, you just can't do it otherwise, and it doesn't mean that you have hidden the remaining eleven twelfths somewhere, no, but perhaps for you it is a different kind of sadness from that I have in mind, anyhow, what she said was: " If I were you I wouldn't try to see her"
There are many pages given to some very amusing thoughts about the way notions of beauty and ugliness have been socially constructed and an account of a production of Hamlet which attempts to defy the audiences expectations of what each character should look like, so Hamlet is kitted out in special, and very expensive, pads so that his legs "were bent like a jockey's". Sad to report, it is not well received by the first night audience.
Of course the novel is called "Tom Harris" and the man of that name is, in one way or another, central to the book whether - in the early part of the book - being observed, followed and spoken to or, in part two of the book, having his "autobiography" written by someone else. Poor Tom? Lucky Tom? Inventor of the haircutting machine (sabotaged by a mob of angry barbers) and suspect in a murder case, he is a fascinating person to read about and as fascinating to not read about. Such are the knots.