Novelist, music journalist and art critic Michael Bracewell’s idiosyncratic memoir, or perhaps memorial, of London in the 1970s and 80s is part essay, part prose poem. A London of stark contrasts, of hushed audiences gathering for readings of Bataille in down-at-heel theatres, exhibitions in crumbling squats, dinner parties where William Burroughs holds forth to reverent spectators, boys in raincoats wander through the rain, girls linger in art gallery bars, Derek Jarman and Kathy Acker reign. Bracewell mixes stretches of hypnotic, impressionistic sketches of cityscapes punctuated by railway lines and grimy underground stations with his soundtrack of the times from Soft Cell to Suburban Lawns. It’s an evocative, immersive piece, a fascinating portrait of an era and a place, despite its emphasis on white-boy-would-be-avant-garde culture - no trace here of Sylvester, disco, hip-hop or reggae parties in Brixton squats. A pre-digital world of dreams and imaginings that will fast give way to a Thatcherite austerity, just beyond the page a world to come of pre-digested pop, Loadsamoney sans irony, city suits, and weekends snorting cocaine.
Rating: 3.5