Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Hawksmoor : Abacus Books - Peter Ackroyd

Hawksmoor

By: Peter Ackroyd

Hardcover | 1 January 1988

Sorry, we are not able to source the book you are looking for right now.

We did a search for other books with a similar title, however there were no matches. You can try selecting from a similar category, click on the author's name, or use the search box above to find your book.

British poet/critic Ackroyd, author of two recent historical novels and a well-received biography of T.S. Eliot (T.S. Eliot: A Life, 1984) has written a novel which mirrors the lives of two Londoners 250 years separated in time; it's stylistically impeccable, but unbeguiling and oddly empty. In 1711, Nicholas Dyer is commissioned by an Act of Parliament to build seven new Parish Churches. He's a master architect and designer and works quickly with his assistant, Walter, to get the job done. But he's not a rational man of the Age of Enlightenment - he believes in the dark secrets of the Druids and the forest peoples of England. Fascinated by the violence in the slums of London, he himself begins to kill - a colleague, a small boy - before finally going mad. In 1985, London C.I.D. detective Nicholas Hawksmoor (who also has an assistant named Walter) begins to investigate a series of murders, all of them taking place in or near churches built by Dyor. He receives a book full of 18th-century drawings and a warning note mysteriously signed by someone calling himself The Universal Architect. He's certain the Architect is a strange tramp seen about London, but his attempts to find the man cause only public panic and more death; in the end, unable to solve the case, he too goes mad. Is this a ghost story? A tale of reincarnation? A parallel universe yarn? It's difficult, if not impossible, to tell, mainly because the novel is dense with literary pyrotechnics - both Nicholases dream the same dreams, share oddly similar experiences, and drift into the same obscure madness. All in all: there's a good deal of literary pretentiousness here, but too little in the way of forthright storytelling, so a well-researched attempt at a tour de force in the style of John Fowles or William Golding simply doesn't come off. (Kirkus Reviews)

More in Modern & Contemporary Fiction

Mad Mabel - Sally Hepworth

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
Good Boy - Michelle Wright

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$21.59

38%
OFF
The Names : 'The best debut novel in years' Sunday Times - Florence Knapp
Between Sisters - Kristin Hannah

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
Theo of Golden - Allen Levi

RRP $32.99

$18.39

44%
OFF
Pilbara - Judy Nunn

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
The Things We Never Say - Elizabeth Strout

RRP $35.00

$24.99

29%
OFF
The Impossible Fortune : The Thursday Murder Club - Richard Osman

RRP $24.99

$17.99

28%
OFF
Great Big Beautiful Life - Emily Henry

RRP $24.99

$17.99

28%
OFF
The Thornbacks - Chloe Wilson

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
The Ruiners - Ellena Savage

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
A Family Matter - Claire Lynch

RRP $24.99

$19.99

20%
OFF
A Rising of the Lights - Steve Toltz

RRP $34.99

$22.99

34%
OFF
One Night at Silver Lake - Katherine Scholes

RRP $34.99

$22.99

34%
OFF
The Couples Retreat - Mercedes Mercier

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
The Other Bennet Sister : TV Tie-in - Janice Hadlow

RRP $26.99

$19.98

26%
OFF
Seascraper - Benjamin Wood

Paperback

RRP $24.99

$21.75

13%
OFF