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Review: King Dido

Baron is back, so prepare to be scared

November 19, 2009 13:58
Baron

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

1 min read

By Alexander Baron
New London Editions, £9.99

It is almost exactly 10 years since Alec Baron died. He was one of the outstanding Anglo-Jewish writers of the post-war period. The Guardian called him “the greatest British novelist of the last war” and his novel From the City from the Plough sold hundreds of thousands of copies.

For 30 years, he was also a leading television dramatist, writing original plays for Armchair Theatre and adapting classics like Jane Eyre and Vanity Fair for the BBC. Recently, some of his best novels have been republished with excellent new introductions, none finer than Ken Worpole’s essay in this new edition of King Dido.

King Dido is one of Baron’s best novels, a gripping thriller of underclass crime in the East End Baron grew up in and knew so well. Set on the eve of the First World War, it tells the story of Dido Peach, who is drawn into the violent world of protection rackets and gang warfare. Think of Daniel Day-Lewis in The Gangs of New York and you would have a good image of the man and his world: “His face was a frame of strong, brutal bones, so hard, the set of his jaw so aggressive, that it brought to mind Teuton warriors, shouts, winging of axes, berserk.”