This book reflects a 48 hour period of time in London through the eyes of five residents. These characters — a group of young men and
their parents — live in and around council estates. They all have an immigrant point of view, a sense of otherness about them, and an intimate knowledge of a history of
colonial violence. When a fanatical recent convert to Islam hacks an
off-duty soldier to death in the street (echoing an actual event),
the young men are startled by a sense they could identify with the killer. He wore the same sneakers they do. He spoke the same slang.
Yusuf, the son of
Pakistani immigrants, is doing his best to avoid the attention of local
Muslim extremists hoping to recruit him. His knowledge of Islam comes
mainly from Nas lyrics, and he would like to keep it that way. He is
happiest at the football pitch with his mates: Ardan, a would-be rapper
whose mother, Caroline, fled Northern Ireland during the Troubles; and
Selvon, an obsessively disciplined athlete desperate to escape the
neighborhood. Selvon’s father, Nelson — mute and wheelchair-bound — is
the historical consciousness of the novel; he was part of the “Windrush
generation,” the Caribbean workers enlisted to rebuild Britain after
World War II. It is through these eyes that we come to see a London that is grittier than what the average tourist passing through is likely to perceive.
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