The Long Firm Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Long Firm Book

"What's breaking into a bank compared with founding one?" Bertolt Brecht's provocative question opens Jake Arnott's first novel, The Long Firm, and sets the scene for its memorable exploration of the London underworld in the early 1960s. Five very different characters tell their five very different stories about "Torture Gang Boss" Harry Starks, a man who likes to keep both Bertrand Russell and Physique Pictorial on his coffee table. His lover and kept boy, Terry, recalls him as a man who "liked to break people" but also a "frightened little child," while according to the Tory lord who frequented his erotic functions, Starks is "lower-class tearaway." In the eyes of his various criminal and starlet peers, Mad Harry is a depressive with a diabolical mind, one who likes to "stage manage the fear." The radical young sociologist who teaches him in prison marks him down as a product of working-class subculture, a living critique of capitalism. When, however, he asks Harry what he makes of Gay Liberation, he doesn't quite get the expected response: "Well," he said with a gleam in his eye. "Someone once called Ronnie Kray a fat poof. Ronnie took the top of his head off with a Luger. That's my sort of Gay Liberation. Though, to be honest, I think it was the fat part what got to him. Ron's, well, touchy about his weight." Harry Starks is the beginning and end of The Long Firm, a compelling showman who embodies the brutal realism and impossible dreams at the heart of Arnott's vision of London low life. The glamour, and the corruption, of that life drive this story, but Arnott manages to weave cliché into enigma, myth into inquiry, thereby revitalizing our well-worn images of the mad, bad, and dangerous to know. As Starks would put it, keeping Brecht's question before the readers' eyes, "It's all about the economy of power." --Vicky LebeauRead More

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  • Product Description

    In the London underworld, a funny and vicious hoodlum dreams of being a clubland impresario.

    Harry Starks is a feared gangster in 1960s London, a rival of the Kray twins and every bit as ruthless. He is menacing and yet compelling. He has an expensive flat in Chelsea full of scrapbooks showing him with Judy Garland, Johnnie Ray, Sonny Liston, Ruby Ryder, and other celebrities who appear at or frequent his club. He likes to hobnob with fighters and performers, even with a member of Parliament. Harry collects them, as if proximity will give him legitimacy. He is like a performer himself, a strange mix of honor and evil. "Show business is in my blood," he boasts, chillingly. Five narrators tell the story of Harry's rise, fall, and surprising resurrection in Jake Arnott's vividly imagined portrait of the sleazy London mobs ("firms") at the end of an era. The Long Firm is being made into a five-part BBC miniseries.

    The gun just goes click. Poxy automatic gone and jammed again. Click. Like a joke gun. Half expect a little flag with bang on it to come out of the barrel. Heavy-lidded eyes glaring at me. The boys have stopped dancing. People standing around stock-still like time has stopped. No joke. Look at fat Ron. Ugly lips flatten out like he's about to say something."Do him!" Ron hisses.

  • 156947169X
  • 9781569471692
  • Jake Arnott
  • 1 September 1999
  • Soho Crime
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 343
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