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All the Tiny Moments Blazing

A Literary Guide to Suburban London

From Evelyn Waugh to P. G. Wodehouse and Lawrence Durrell, a sweeping celebration of literature set in and inspired by the suburbs of London.

The London suburbs have, for more than two hundred and fifty years, fired the creative literary imagination: whether this is Samuel Johnson hiding away in bucolic preindustrial Streatham, Italo Svevo cheering on Charlton Athletic Football Club down at The Valley, or Angela Carter hymning the joyful “wrongness” of living south-of-the-river in Brixton. From Richmond to Rainham, Cockfosters to Croydon, this sweeping literary tour of the thirty-two London Boroughs describes how writers, from the seventeenth century on, have responded to and fictionally reimagined London’s suburbs. It introduces us to the great suburban novels, such as Hanif Kureishi’s Bromley-set The Buddha of Suburbia, Lawrence Durrell’s The Black Book, and Zadie Smith’s NW. It also reveals the lesser-known short stories, diaries, poems, local guides, travelogues, memoirs, and biographies, which together show how these communities have long been closely observed, keenly remembered, and brilliantly imagined.

480 pages | 6 halftones, 6 maps | 6 1/4 x 9 1/4 | © 2020

Literature and Literary Criticism: British and Irish Literature


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Reviews

“Urban magnetism is now under threat but Pope’s charming circuit of London’s suburbs and the figures who frequented them in All The Tiny Moments Blazing is a reminder that cities have coped with worse. Even urban smog has its benefits: ‘Monet worked in the park whilst I, living at Lower Norwood, at that time a charming suburb, studied the effects of fog, snow and springtime,’ Camille Pissarro wrote of 1870.”

Financial Times

“What Pope does brilliantly is map an alternative and largely neglected corpus of London-based texts, one that is very different from the typical fare of ‘literary London.’ Although some of the usual suspects recur time and again—Dickens, H. G. Wells, Iain Sinclair—the guide is replete with new and forgotten voices. . . . As a genre, guides are designed to prepare us for travel, to provide us with ways of interpreting our experiences, and—perhaps most importantly—to encourage us to step into otherwise unknown territory. Pope does all of this, and equips us for our own exciting suburban adventures.”

London Journal

“A love letter to the suburbs, an ode to London’s less flashy streets.”

Dulwich Diverter

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