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Angelmaker
 
 

Angelmaker [Paperback]

Nick Harkaway

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Random House Export (Feb 1 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0434020958
  • ISBN-13: 978-0434020959
  • Product Dimensions: 23.2 x 15.4 x 4.4 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 762 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #537,673 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

“It’s hard to put a finger on exactly why Angelmaker is one of the year’s best books. Know this, though: it is.”
    —Niall Alexander, Tor.com

“Greetings to Joe Spork, the book world’s newest hero. He springs from the fertile, absurdist imagination of Harkaway in his follow-up to The Gone-Away World.”
   —Billy Heller, New York Post
 
“Brilliant, wholly original, and a major-league hoot.”
    —Adam Woog, The Seattle Times

“[Harkaway] manages to write surrealist adventure novels that feel both urgent and relevant. His novels are fun to read without seeming particularly frivolous, and beneath all the derring-do and shenanigans, there’s a low thrum of anxiety: everything and everyone you love could disappear at any moment. . . . Angelmaker is a truly impressive achievement.”
    —Emily St. John Mandel, The Millions
 
“A big, gleefully absurd, huggable bear of a novel. . . . A pleasantly roomy book, a grand old manor house of a novel that sprawls and stretches. . . . In passage after passage, Angelmaker opens up, making room for the reader, until we aren’t merely empathizing with Joe Spork’s plight but feeling it keenly. . . . All the more reason to applaud Harkaway for creating Joe Spork: not only like us but likable, a hero who serves not as a dark mirror but as a funhouse one.”
     —Glen Weldon, Slate 
 
“[A] gloriously uninhibited romp of a novel. . . . Harkaway has managed to recapture the lighthearted brio of an earlier age of precision entertainment, when the world was deemed to be perpetually teetering on the brink of Armageddon but always capable of being snatched back to safety with a quip, a wink, [and] a judo chop.”
    —Paul Di Filippo, Barnes and Noble Review 

“A lot of books are fun to read for the plot; a smaller percentage display this artful mastery of the language. And precious few manage to do both. Angelmaker, the second novel by British writer Nick Harkaway, falls into that last category. . . . This is not the sort of book I zip through, despite wanting to know what happens next. It’s the sort of book you want to let steep in your brain a bit before you take another taste.”
     —Jonathan Liu, Wired.com’s GeekDad blog

“An intricate and brilliant piece of escapism, tipping its hat to the twisting plots of John Buchan and H Rider Haggard, the goggles-and-gauntlets Victoriana of the steampunk movement and the labyrinthine secret Londons of Peter Ackroyd and Iain Sinclair, while maintaining an originality, humour and verve all its author’s own. . . .  Angelmaker must have been huge fun to write, and it is huge fun to read. . . . A fantasy espionage novel stuffed with energetic, elegant writing that bowls the reader along while reflecting profitably on the trends of the times. Gleefully nostalgic and firmly modern, hand-on-heart and tongue-in-cheek, this is as far as it could be from the wearied tropes that dominate so much of fantasy and SF. I can’t wait to see what Harkaway does next.”
     —Tim Martin, Daily Telegraph, (5 out of 5 stars)

“Harkaway’s celebrated debut, The Gone-Away World . . . was really just a warm up act—a prodigiously talented novelist stretching muscles that few other writers even possess—for this tour de force Dickensian bravura and genre-bending splendor. . . . This is a marvelous book, both sublimely intricate and compulsively readable.”
      —Bill Ott, Booklist (starred review)
 
“Harkaway keeps us guessing, traveling the edges between fantasy, sci-fi, the detective novel, pomo fiction and a good old-fashioned comedy of the sort that Jerome K. Jerome might have written had he had a ticking thingy instead of a boat as his prop. . . . His tale stands comparison to Haruki Murakami’s 1Q84.”
     —Kirkus (starred review)

“A long, wild journey through a London dream world. . . . With its bizarre scenarios and feverish wordiness, its huge cast of British eccentrics and the ark forces of paranoia and totalitarianism lurking everywhere, this novel recalls the works of Martin Amis and Will Self. Immense fun and quite exciting.”
    —Jim Coan, Library Journal

“A puzzle box of a novel as fascinating as the clockwork bees it contains, filled with intrigue, espionage and creative use of trains. As if that were not enough to win my literary affection, Harkaway went and gave me a raging crush on a fictional lawyer.”
     —Erin Morgenstern, author of The Night Circus

“You are in for a treat, sort of like Dickens meets Mervyn Peake in a modern Mother London. The very best sort of odd.” 
   —William Gibson, author of Zero History
                       
“Nick Harkaway's novel is like a fractal: when examined at any scale, it reveals itself to be complex, fine-structured and ornately beautiful. And just like a fractal, all of this complexity and beauty derives from a powerful and elegant underlying idea.”
   —Charles Yu, author of How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe
 
“This brilliant, boundless mad genius of a book runs on its own frenetic energy, and bursts with infinite wit, inventive ambition and damn fine storytelling. You finish reading it in gape-mouthed awe and breathless admiration, having experienced something very special indeed.”
   —Matt Haig, author of The Radleys

“A joyously sprawling, elaborately plotted, endlessly entertaining novel filled with adventure, comedy, espionage, and romance, Angelmaker also deals with intriguing questions of free will and the nature of truth without stopping to take a breath. As if the book is made of clockwork, the pages turn themselves.”
   —Dexter Palmer, author of The Dream of Perpetual Motion

Praise from the U.K.

“A magnificent, literary, post-pulp triumph. . . . Angelmaker is an entertaining tour-de-force that demands to be adored.”
     —David Barnett, The Independent

“An ambitious, crowded, restless caper, cleverly told and utterly immune to précis. . . .  A solid work of modern fantasy fiction.”
     —James Purdon, The Observer

“Angelmaker
is one of the most enjoyable books I’ve read in ages. . . . A joyful display of reckless, delightful invention, on a par with the rocket-powered novels of Neal Stephenson, if in rather more ironically diffident English form. Ideas come zinging in from all corners, and do so with linguistic verve and tremendous humour. . . . Once it gets going, it’s brilliantly entertaining, and the last hundred pages are pure, unhinged delight. What a splendid ride.”
     —Patrick Ness, The Guardian

“[The Gone-Away World] was a work of such glorious, exhaustive excess a part of me wondered if Harkaway would actually write again. I am profoundly glad that he has: Angelmaker is every bit as entertaining and imaginative. . . . Effervescent and witty. . . . Harkaway manages the ideal blend of paying homage to a very British sense of decency and fair play, while at the same time idolising the rule-breakers.”
     —Stuart Kelly, Scotsman on Sunday
 
“[Harkaway is] a rare kind of writer. . . . There is something elegantly nostalgic about Angelmaker, whether in the derring-do adventure of it, or the loving invocations of artisanship. . . . [Yet] it’s a gleefully post-modern book in its weaving together of genres with imagery from comic books, film and TV, and its richly imagined setting of a London with underground passages and secret markets.”
    —Susan Mansfield, The Scotsman --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Book Description

From the acclaimed author of The Gone-Away World, blistering gangster noir meets howling absurdist comedy as the forces of good square off against the forces of evil, and only an unassuming clockwork repairman and an octogenarian former superspy can save the world from total destruction.
 
Joe Spork spends his days fixing antique clocks. The son of infamous London criminal Mathew “Tommy Gun” Spork, he has turned his back on his family’s mobster history and aims to live a quiet life. That orderly existence is suddenly upended when Joe activates a particularly unusual clockwork mechanism. His client, Edie Banister, is more than the kindly old lady she appears to be—she’s a retired international secret agent. And the device? It’s a 1950s doomsday machine. Having triggered it, Joe now faces the wrath of both the British government and a diabolical South Asian dictator who is also Edie’s old arch-nemesis. On the upside, Joe’s got a girl: a bold receptionist named Polly whose smarts, savvy and sex appeal may be just what he needs. With Joe’s once-quiet world suddenly overrun by mad monks, psychopathic serial killers, scientific geniuses and threats to the future of conscious life in the universe, he realizes that the only way to survive is to muster the courage to fight, help Edie complete a mission she abandoned years ago and pick up his father’s old gun . . . --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (36 customer reviews)

13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Stunning, Feb 18 2012
By John Lemut - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Angelmaker (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
"Angelmaker" by Nick Harkaway is such a densely written and intricately plotted work that my feelings about it are nearly exclusively positive (glowing, even), but I did find myself somewhat frustrated on occasion at its verboseness--the only negative I found within this novel. But there's no denying Harkaway is a gifted author and storyteller.

One of the many things that make this book not just your average spy thriller is that although it takes place primarily in contemporary London, all the gadgets and doo-dads are from an older time and they're clockwork-driven mysteries unto themselves. There are no James Bond-sey gadgets that will seem ridiculous in fifteen years. The mystique of the Apprehension Engine and all the rest is they are already far-fetched, but they're somehow believable because they are call backs to a time when things like craftsmanship and artisanship meant something. Not to be down on technology-age devices, but there's an allure to those things that had no microchips or electronics, things that someone made with delicate instruments they themselves also made. How did anyone get anything done back them? This book captures these ideas wonderfully, like clockwork.

From Joe Spork, the protagonist, to supporting characters with names like Rodney Titwhistle, Clarissa Foxglove, Arvin Cummerbund and Edie Banister, it's the little details in this book that truly give it shape. I kept expecting to turn the page and be introduced to a character named Fotheringay, perhaps a kindly, grey-haired, bespectacled old boy stuck at a middle rank in Her Majesty's Secret Service or something (sorry, but I love "The Prisoner").

The humor in this book, often delivered sharply and without any real setup, at times is very obvious and is at other times so sly, you'll find yourself thinking back on it a paragraph or two later with a chuckle. The back stories of the characters and Joe's family lineage were page-turning and the ramp up in action at the end of the book was thrilling.

If you made it this far in the review, I hope you'll take my praise for "Angelmaker" to heart and consider giving it a read.

I received this book at no cost as a member of the Vine Program.

12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars "The Secret Garden" for Adults, Feb 6 2012
By Timothy J. Mccarthy - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Angelmaker (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
Think of the "Angelmaker" as a sort of shape-shifting novel, by parts sci-fi, adventure, comedy, and tragedy. It's essentially three connected stories stitched together, though not quite seamlessly.

The first story, and easily the best, introduces Joe Spork. The son of one of Britain's greatest criminals, he spends his life admiring his father but trying to follow his grandfather's straight-laced footsteps as a clockmaker. Joe wanders through a Victorian part of London that's become lost to the law-abiding, travelling with friends and acquaintances who are most decidedly different. This part is so quirky, so Marty Feldmanish type of off-the-wall loony, that you have to re-read some of the pages until you get the hang of it. To say Harkaway has a wicked sense of humour doesn't do him justice by half; anyone who can conceive of a dog with a single tooth and two glass eyes has a truly demented and tortured soul. And the test of the Waiting-Men-to-be is something you dare not read on the bus or in an airport.

The second story starts during WWII, and ushers in the gender-bending Edie and Frankie, a fledgling British spy and a genius French inventor who's been co-opted by a megalomaniacal Eastern tyrant to build a doomsday device. This is much darker than the first story, almost shocking in highlighting the villain's depravity. While it has its highpoints, it suffers by the jarring contrast.

The third story is the strange tale of Spork's revenge. It's a mix of the first two stories but pumped up on steroids. With his new girlfriend at his side, Spork blasts into action to save the world, and get a measure of vengeance in the bargain. Utterly manic and bizarre, it drifts too far into the realm of comic book ethos to be fully satisfying.

I'm not sure whether the dedication should acknowledge a debt to Jules Verne, or render an apology. Or both. It's that sort of book. It's better than 4-stars, and well worth reading, but a little more quirkiness and less darkness would have given us a near-perfect read.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I could NOT put this down!, Jan 26 2012
By S. Goodwin - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Angelmaker (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
This book is rich-- like a truffle. I thought it would be more spare and streamlined, as the blurb mentioned the word "noir" which I always associate with a dearth of information and a secretive and unknowable protagonist. Not so Joe Spork, the protagonist in Angelmaker. Joe is introspective and insecure, thoughtful and extremely conscious, he is not Sam Spade and doesn't want to be. He is involved in a dilemma by a perverse series of events-- not by choice. That doesn't mean that he is a helpless tool of destiny (always an irritating way to portray a character, in my view). Joe tackles adversity (in his case this is characterized as high intrigue, a pastime he hoped to avoid when he chose his grandfather's profession of clockmaker/repairman over his deceased father's gangster occupation) with a sang froid that is not only admirable, but frequently amusing.

I would almost have loved Joe for his name alone: Spork. But the fact is that Nick Harkaway had me laughing out loud almost from page one. He has a flair for description and character creation that reminds me of Dickens. Not only are the names of some of the characters (Spork, Titwhistle, Dotty Catty, and on and on) amusing, but the dialogue is uniformly sharp and witty and fun. At almost 600 pages you may think this book would seem like a long read. Wrong. I absolutely could not stop reading and felt like crying when it was over. MORE! MORE!

Harkaway keeps the story moving at a quick clip while adding more and more bizarre characters to the mix. You'd think there would be too many to keep straight, but the sheer strangeness and hilarious nature of most of them keep them securely fixed in your mind.

For some reason this book reminded me of a cross between Victor Gischler, Tim Dorsey, and Hunter Thompson. Maybe it is the compelling and exciting pacing or the absurdist story lines they all seem to effortlessly carry off that makes reading them so much fun. If you like any of the above authors I think you will enjoy Harkaway. I already have his first novel on my "to read" pile.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 36 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 

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