The Worms of Euston Square
Sun 10 Sep 2006
From the online newspaper www.scotsman.com
Fine praise for William's new book. He did a slot at at the Edinburgh Festival.
The Worms Of Euston Square
MICHAEL GARDINER
Crescent
WILLIAM Sutton's contribution to Crescent's expanding fiction list is a period comedy-crime novel set in high-Victorian
All of this takes place in
There are three areas in which the book scores. First, it's an enormously well researched account of what was going on from 1858-62, including the controversy over the building of the new London Underground ("folly we like to style progress" as Sutton's amusingly fickle Euston Evening Bugle terms it), Victoria's mourning, and Marx studying in the British Library.
Second, its portrayal of post-1848 political sects, from Irish nationalists to utopian anarchists, all of which have to be wormed through to get to a crime, which is built of the very stuff of the industrial revolution, beginning with a sabotaged clock. Sutton is clearly capable of this: the watchmaker Ganz, for example, throws the narrative into relief with his aside that "people think time is money and speed's of the essence".
Third, Sutton draws on a rich seam of Edinburgh-London diaspora; his hero's background which is mechanical, practical and inquisitive. The arch-villain, Berwick Skelton, has been named with an ironic nod to the town sacked repeatedly by the English, and the Scotophobe 16th-century poet.
This mix of social history and mid-Victorian Keystone Cops makes Sutton's debut novel highly original and engaging. He has joyfully thrown himself into the mood, avoiding the leaden naturalism that would have been a more obvious option.
Check out more about William here: http://www.william-sutton.co.uk/
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