A mixture of fiction with real-life characters, most notably the Kray brothers and Jack the Hat, interwoven in the story, it is in five parts, each one narrated by a different character. Throughout it all Harry Starks, a homosexual gangland boss with a weakness for stardom and a yearning for respectability, features strongly, in more ways than one, some pleasant, many unpleasant!
The interaction between each narrator and Harry is different but the overriding feature is that, telling of their dealings with the moody Harry, there is always trouble between them if things do not go Harry's way.
The first of the quintet is Terry. It was his first year in London, living in a bedsit in Westbourne Grove (close to where I first lived when I went to London straight from school). He first encountered Harry in a coffee bar called The Casbah Lounge and when Harry entered and looked round, he took an immediate shine to the boy. For a goodly time, therefore, Terry became Harry's pretty suburban kept boy. The relationship was fraught with danger, Harry thrived, Terry suffered and when they parted Harry told him, 'You don't talk to anybody about anything. You've had a taste of what will happen if you do.'
Teddy is a homosexual, corrupt peer who wants fame and to make an easy buck. But dealing with Harry was too much for him, he was tied in knots, frightened to say anything out of turn and very quickly found himself out of his depth in all the corrupt busy dealings that were going on. This was particularly the case when he got involved in a business venture in Africa a situation he wanted to pull out of but could not do so until the whole operation went sour and he was very relieved to, in his own words, 'get out of this god-forsaken place'. But it was at a heavy cost.
The third episode features a well-known East End gangster in Jack the Hat McVitie, who at one time was very close to the Krays but in this episode he teams up with their rival Harry Starks. And it leads to all sorts of trouble and ends up with ... well, if you know the story of Jack the Hat you won't need reminding. But suffice it to say that Jack played both sides and eventually suffered for his duplicity.
The female element of the story features Ruby Ryder, a blonde fading Rank starlet who gets involved in Harry's pornography industry where she comes across the corrupt cop George Mooney. Unfortunately for her she is led a merry dance and suffers at the hands of both Harry and Mooney but ultimately it is the former who suffers.
Finally, in perhaps the least interesting episode of the whole story, which falls away somewhat, is Lenny, a criminologist who like the others, has a relationship with Harry that leads him into the dark realities of the criminal underworld. Ultimately, in a dramatic climax, he, too, is out of his comfort zone and, at his lowest ebb because of his actions, has to be reassured by Harry, 'Come on. Breathe out slowly. That's it. Let it go.' Harry unperturbed then makes his getaway!
The ambience of the novel is perfect and although obviously not involved in such activities in my time in London, which coincides very well with this tale, it does capture the period detail of the metropolis as it was with many familiar landmarks brought back to me. Jake Arnott very definitely captures a vivid evocation of the times in a very readable tale.