Synopses & Reviews
London at night has always been seen as a lawless orgy of depravity and pestilence. But is it now as bland and unthreatening as any new town? Sukhdev Sandhu journeys across the city to find out whether the London night really has been rendered neutral by street lighting and CCTV cameras. His nocturnal forays see him prospecting in the London night with the people who drive its pulse, from the avian police to security guards, urban fox hunters and exorcists. He wades through the sewers, hangs out with pirate DJs, and accompanies the marine patrol looking for midnight corpses. Beautifully written, Night Haunts seeks to reclaim the mystery and romance of the city—to revitalize the great myth of London for a new century.
Review
"Some of the most ambitious and memorable work of the last decade." Time Out
Review
"Artangel is truly on the side of the angels." Independent
Synopsis
“I would add Sandhu’s work to the likes of Lights Out for the Territoryas offering some of the greatest insights we have into contemporary London.”—Michael Moorcock, Daily Telegraph
Synopsis
“I would add Sandhu’s work to the likes of Lights Out for the Territoryas offering some of the greatest insights we have into contemporary London.”—Michael Moorcock, Daily Telegraph
Synopsis
Traditional depictions of London at night have imagined a lawless orgy of depravity and pestilence. But is Britain’s capital after dark now as bland and unthreatening as an evening in any new provincial town? Sukhdev Sandhu journeys across the city to find out whether the London night really has been rendered insipid by street lighting and CCTV. Night Hauntsseeks to reclaim the mystery and romance of the city—to revitalize the great myth of London for a new century.
Synopsis
A beautifully designed, brilliantly imagined journey into the dark heart of twenty-first century London.
About the Author
Sukhdev Sandhu is Chief Film Critic of the London Daily Telegraph, Professor of English Literature at New York University, and a Contributing Editor at Granta. He was named Critic of the Year at the British Press Awards in 2005. He is the author of London Calling: How Black and Asian Writers Imagined a City (2003, which was shortlisted for the John Rhys Llewelly Prize), and of I'll Get My Coat (2005). He is a regular broadcaster for BBC Radio, and his writings have appeared in the London Review of Books, New York Magazine, Modern Painters, Conde Nast Traveller and many other publications.