The Great When
The Great When is the first of five intended fantasy novels in The Long London Quintet series by English author Alan Moore.
Background
Author Alan Moore resolved that The Long London Quintet series would investigate the five closing decades of the twentieth century, that we might understand our own. The Great When is a wordplay on "the Great Wen", an epithet coined by English pamphleteer William Cobbett to belittle 19th-century London as a sebaceous cyst, or wen. Moore invented the name Dennis Knuckleyard while falling asleep and deemed it laughable and captivating, later on realising that nobody has ever had Knuckleyard as their patronym. He researched London from memory, the written works of Michael Moorcock and Iain Sinclair, an archive devoted to Stoke Newington, and such period maps as London A–Z; owing to a want of walking strength, he did not see the streets in person as otherwise he would. The toughest part of writing, according to him, was merging this bygone geography with magic in order that readers feel a visceral, vicarious attachment. Italics were applied to signify an immediate sense of circumstantial displacement at entering the Great When, which Moore thought ought to be "a shattering experience" and purposefully antithetical to similar, yet harmless events in fantasy. He acknowledged comic book illustrator Kevin O'Neill for creating Ironfoot Jack Neave in The [League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume III: Century#Chapter 2: Paint It Black|The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century 1969] and telling him the anecdote that granted Coffin Ada her hostility to haggling. The Friends of Arthur Machen literary society contributed insight into the Welsh author and mystic.Plot
In 1949, eighteen-year-old Dennis Knuckleyard is working at a second-hand bookshop in Shoreditch, London. The proprietor Ada Benson dispatches him to obtain some rare Arthur Machen books from a business near Charing Cross Road, but Dennis discovers it shut. He proceeds to the owner's flat in Berwick Street, where Ada's contact Flabby Harrison invites him up with some anxiety. Dennis learns that the assortment of goods contains one stray item, A London Walk by the Reverend Thomas Hampole. This prompts Flabby to lower his price, swaying Dennis before he delivers the lot back to the shop.A troubled Ada demands that Dennis return A London Walk because she says it comes from another London and is not meant to exist. When Dennis reaches Berwick Street, he sees Flabby dead in an ambulance. He flees in fear, drinks until the evening, and decides then to dispose of the ill-fated artefact where he got it, but is pursued by two men until he escapes through a gate of sorts and enters an otherworldly area of London where the environment is attempting to eat him. Taken to safety by local Maurice Calendar, Dennis is advised to call on surrealist painter Austin Spare to get A London Walk to the City Heads, before dropping him off in Fleet Street proper. Prostitute Grace Shilling, who notices him weeping on the curb, shelters him out of curiosity.
Dennis travels into Brixton and, enquiring where Austin Spare lives, gets pointed towards the most dilapidated residence. He is let inside Austin's tiny basement flat and tells him of his predicament. Austin is willing to help and suggests that, for Dennis' welfare, he keep A London Walk with him in the meantime. Upon Dennis' re-entry into Grace's flat, he is met with three gangsters holding Grace hostage. Jack Spot, the boss, knows of the other London and means to negotiate with the god of villains in this realm. Dennis proposes that he arrange a gathering between them once the book is where it belongs; Jack agrees on the condition that Grace and Dennis' lives be collateral. The morning after, Dennis and Austin make their way into the other London, where they finally entrust the City Heads with A London Walk and schedule an audience at Arnold Circus on Jack's behalf.
In the physical state, Dennis meets with his mate Clive Amery to confide in him his recent ordeals, heading next to attend Jack's appointment. He runs into Clive sometime later, agreeing to reunite a week hence at a café called Franklin's. Meanwhile, Dennis sits down with journalist friend John McAllister and they broach the topic of murder victims, of which one was Kenneth Dolden, reminding Dennis of something he glimpsed long ago in Clive's notebook: Dolden, Green, Dorland & Lockart; he requests that John look into the others. Dennis takes Grace to an art gallery held by Austin at a Walworth Road bar. John is there too and informs Dennis that the names are connected to unsolved homicide cases, which unsettles him greatly. He meets Clive at Franklin's, but panics and rushes out, yet Clive follows him into the other London. Dennis accuses Clive of being a serial killer. Clive admits it and states that Dennis will be fated the same, continuing his pursuit. They race as far as the man-eating district, where Dennis manoeuvres it so that Clive gets devoured by a pavement alligator. Dennis slips away, finally restoring his life at Ada's bookshop.