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Jerusalem Hardcover – September 13, 2016
New York Times Bestseller
Fierce in its imagining and stupefying in its scope, Jerusalem is the tale of everything, told from a vanished gutter.
In the epic novel Jerusalem, Alan Moore channels both the ecstatic visions of William Blake and the theoretical physics of Albert Einstein through the hardscrabble streets and alleys of his hometown of Northampton, UK. In the half a square mile of decay and demolition that was England’s Saxon capital, eternity is loitering between the firetrap housing projects. Embedded in the grubby amber of the district’s narrative among its saints, kings, prostitutes, and derelicts, a different kind of human time is happening, a soiled simultaneity that does not differentiate between the petrol-colored puddles and the fractured dreams of those who navigate them.
Employing, a kaleidoscope of literary forms and styles that ranges from brutal social realism to extravagant children’s fantasy, from the modern stage drama to the extremes of science fiction, Jerusalem’s dizzyingly rich cast of characters includes the living, the dead, the celestial, and the infernal in an intricately woven tapestry that presents a vision of an absolute and timeless human reality in all of its exquisite, comical, and heartbreaking splendor.
In these pages lurk demons from the second-century Book of Tobit and angels with golden blood who reduce fate to a snooker tournament. Vagrants, prostitutes, and ghosts rub shoulders with Oliver Cromwell, Samuel Beckett, James Joyce’s tragic daughter Lucia, and Buffalo Bill, among many others. There is a conversation in the thunderstruck dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral, childbirth on the cobblestones of Lambeth Walk, an estranged couple sitting all night on the cold steps of a Gothic church front, and an infant choking on a cough drop for eleven chapters. An art exhibition is in preparation, and above the world a naked old man and a beautiful dead baby race along the Attics of the Breath toward the heat death of the universe.
An opulent mythology for those without a pot to piss in, through the labyrinthine streets and pages of Jerusalem tread ghosts that sing of wealth, poverty, and our threadbare millennium. They discuss English as a visionary language from John Bunyan to James Joyce, hold forth on the illusion of mortality post-Einstein, and insist upon the meanest slum as Blake’s eternal holy city.
1 map; 3 illustrations- Print length1280 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLiveright
- Publication dateSeptember 13, 2016
- Dimensions6.6 x 2.4 x 9.6 inches
- ISBN-109781631491344
- ISBN-13978-1631491344
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Editorial Reviews
Review
― Douglas Wolk, New York Times Book Review
"A hymn to Northampton, a commemoration of the lost people and places of his childhood. . . . Epic in scope. . . . The novel has the immersive imaginative power of fable; it also deepens Moore’s career-long investigation into the kind of collapsed rationality that borders on genius and might, very easily, be misdiagnosed as madness."
― Nat Segnit, The New Yorker
"Jerusalem is Moore’s apotheosis, a fourth-dimensional symphony of his own beloved city. . . .A love song for a vanished neighborhood, and a battle cry for an embattled class left behind by centuries of powermongers and tyrants and corporations and New Labour. . . .Jerusalem soars high on the wings of the author’s psychedelic imagination. His bighearted passion for his people, his city, and the whole monstrous endeavor of the human condition is infectious. I’m not sure there’s a God, but I thank Her for Alan Moore."
― Entertainment Weekly
"Epic in scope and phantasmagoric to its briny core. . . .The prose sparkles at every turn. . . . It’s a difficult book in all the right ways in that it brilliantly challenges us to confront what we think and know about the very fabric of existence. . . . A massive literary achievement for our time―and maybe for all times simultaneously."
― Andrew Ervin, Washington Post
"Unquestionably Jerusalem is Moore’s most ambitious statement yet ― his War and Peace, his Ulysses. The prose scintillates throughout, a traffic jam of hooting dialect and vernacular trundling nose-to-tail with pantechnicons of pop culture allusion. Exploring a single town’s psychogeography with a passionate forensic intensity, Moore makes the parochial universal, the mundane sublime and the temporal never-ending."
― James Lovegrove, Financial Times
"A magnificent, sprawling cosmic epic.
"
― Guardian
"Moore, you genius. . . .A testament to Moore’s skill at genre juggling, at cultivating a sense of awe at the universe’s frightening expanse and its beautiful mysteries."
― Zak Salih, The Millions
"Rewarding―a novel that refuses to fit neatly into any classification other than the unclassifiable."
― Ron Hogan, Dallas Morning News
"Moore’s prose is rich and complicated. . . .Once you slip into the rhythm of it, it is also poetic, insightful, and beautiful. . . .There are insights, revelations, and joys that would come from successive readings. It is possible that scholars will be picking this apart for years to come."
― Wayne Wise, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"Staggeringly imaginative…bold readers who answer the call will be rewarded with unmatched writing that soars, chills, wallows, and ultimately describes a new cosmology. Challenges and all, Jerusalem ensures Moore’s place as one of the great masters of the English language."
― Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Mind-meld James Michener, Charles Dickens, and Stephen King and you'll approach the territory the endlessly inventive Moore stakes out in his most magnum of magna opera. . . . Many storylines dance through Moore's pages as he walks through those humid streets, ranging among voices and moods, turning here to Joycean stream-of-consciousness and there to Eliot-ian poetry ("Their gait resembling the Lambeth Walk/While in the upper corners of the room/Are gruff, gesticulating little men"), but in the end forging a style unlike any other. Magisterial: an epic that outdoes Danielewski, Vollmann, Stephenson, and other worldbuilders in vision and depth."
― Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"For his latest work, Moore turns in a sprawling, million-word saga blending fantasy and historical fiction set roughly in the Northampton, England, neighborhood in which he grew up. . . . [Moore’s] fans will doubtless find much here to ponder and delight in."
― Booklist (starred review)
"[Jerusalem] is a story about everything: life, death, the afterlife, free will, famous Northamptonians (John Clare, Oliver Cromwell, Philip Doddridge) rubbing elbows with prostitutes and drug addicts over time and space. It is about how, no matter what happens in life, we all go to the same place when we die; how everything, literally everything, is determined by four angels playing a game of snooker. It is confusing, hilarious, sad, mind-blowing, poignant, frustrating, and one of the most beautiful books ever written. More of a work of art than a novel, this book simply needs to be read."
― Library Journal (starred review)
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 1631491342
- Publisher : Liveright; First Edition (September 13, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 1280 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781631491344
- ISBN-13 : 978-1631491344
- Item Weight : 3.75 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.6 x 2.4 x 9.6 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #988,751 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,755 in Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction (Books)
- #46,850 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #66,476 in Science Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Alan Moore is an English writer most famous for his influential work in comics, including the acclaimed graphic novels Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell. He has also written a novel, Voice of the Fire, and performs "workings" (one-off performance art/spoken word pieces) with The Moon and Serpent Grand Egyptian Theatre of Marvels, some of which have been released on CD.
Bio and photo from Goodreads.
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Customers find the book engaging and worth their time. They praise the storytelling as wonderful and masterful. The book explores a rich, interesting area with depth and complexity. Readers appreciate the lighthearted humor and believable character development. However, some feel the book is too long and tedious in parts.
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Customers find the book entertaining and worth their time. They recommend it to fans of Alan Moore and those looking for a leisurely mindbender. The epic is well-worth learning to read deeply and thoughtfully.
"...But this is his masterpiece: dazzling, diverting, and utterly delightful." Read more
"In some ways, it’s impossible to review Jerusalem. The book is a masterpiece!..." Read more
"...Is it a masterpiece? Yes. Is it worth your time? Yes. Is it funny? Frequently. Moving? That too." Read more
"...; although there sections difficult to wade through, it is worth the work...." Read more
Customers enjoy the storytelling in this book. They find it engaging, with an epic narrative and magic delivered through expansive prose and psychedelic poetry. The author is described as a masterful storyteller, and the book is described as interesting and entertaining with many narrative threads that fit together in interesting ways.
"...Moore plays all kinds of linguistic games, writing in varied styles including Victorian gothic, Chandleresque hardboiled detective, and the sort of..." Read more
"...It’s no small surprise that he’s one of the best comic book writers in history. I’ve read a number of his essays and they’re all brilliant...." Read more
"...It is hopeful,dark,nostalgic, lighthearted, suspensful, thoughtful and meditative...." Read more
"...The point is very interesting and some of the storylines are really engaging but I found it uneven in that sense." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's depth. They find it an interesting exploration of a specific area, with amazing moments and esoteric elements. The storylines are engaging, and the fantasy is full of wondrous ideas and descriptions. Readers appreciate the historical references and allusions, which provide a thorough grounding in literature and English.
"...Alan Moore’s "Jerusalem," published in 2016, is a highly experimental work, with each chapter told from a different character’s point of view,..." Read more
"...Jerusalem is a masterwork: audacious, entertaining, witty, concerned with big ideas, self-deprecating and kaleidoscopic, a carton full of Fabergé..." Read more
"...But this tale is not literary realism. It is a sprawling fantasy sprouted from the fusion of history, religion, literature, politics, and, I daresay..." Read more
"...is hopeful,dark,nostalgic, lighthearted, suspensful, thoughtful and meditative...." Read more
Customers enjoy the humor in the book. They describe it as lighthearted, suspenseful, and delightful. The prose is exuberant and playful, often amusing. The mood is light and thought-provoking, with a love letter to Northampton.
"...(in both figurative and literal senses); but the prose is exuberant, playful, often amusing...." Read more
"...He was half right. Jerusalem is a masterwork: audacious, entertaining, witty, concerned with big ideas, self-deprecating and kaleidoscopic, a carton..." Read more
"...It is hopeful,dark,nostalgic, lighthearted, suspensful, thoughtful and meditative...." Read more
"...There are also plenty of smaller jolts of joy along the way that lead to a small and satisfied smile...." Read more
Customers enjoy the believable characters. They find the book has an engaging humor and excitement that keeps them hooked.
"...The novel is filled with hordes of memorable characters. I can’t even begin to list them in this review. The major thread is of the Vernall family...." Read more
"...Moreover, he cranks out tons of characters that are believable and as real as any human you might meet in real life...." Read more
"...'s ride with the demon was a great leap forward in humor and excitement and character..." Read more
"...The characters are also multi layered and highly developed...." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it detailed, clever, and witty, with lovely words and descriptions. Others mention it's not an easy read in some parts, with tediously wordy passages and overwritten sections that require a lot of effort to read.
"...to find ourselves halfway through the novel plunged into an extraordinarily detailed and original afterlife world where most of the characters are “..." Read more
"...On the one hand, it is glorious. On the other hand, some passages are so tediously wordy that were Stephen King to read the novel, he probably turn..." Read more
"...The book is a masterpiece! It’s a million words in length and one of the longest books ever written in the English language...." Read more
"...Recommended, but definitely not an easy read!" Read more
Customers have different views on the pacing. Some find it thrilling, mesmerizing, and poetic. Others find it tedious and depressing, with grim subject matter.
"...This is monster of a novel, a rewarding workout, but a workout none the less...." Read more
"...Much of the subject matter is grim, threatening, haunting (in both figurative and literal senses); but the prose is exuberant, playful, often amusing..." Read more
"Experimental, haunting, filled historical and esoteric goodies, satisfying for any Moore fan." Read more
"...The only reasons for a 4-star review: (a) it's depressing (maybe a requirement for the English professor papers bit), and (b) though the exquisitely..." Read more
Customers find the book too long. They say it's too long and could be 400 pages shorter.
"Honestly too long. Reading this book felt like doing battle. I think he could've made a more engaging book by cutting about 400 pages from it...." Read more
"...Long and challenging but very rewarding." Read more
"It's long but well-written. I had the hardcover but it was so heavy I got the Kindle version." Read more
"I did not like this book. It is way to long and you have to decipher one chapter. I finally gave up and did not finish it." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2018This is a massive contemporary novel which upends all the rules of contemporary straight-ahead prose. Alan Moore’s "Jerusalem," published in 2016, is a highly experimental work, with each chapter told from a different character’s point of view, jumping around chronologically to visit times as long past as the early Middle Ages and as far distant as the projected end of the universe. In these ways it resembles quite a few modern novels.
But its prose is a marvelous tangle of description, simile, and wordplay.
Let’s begin with a feature that may well be off-putting for many readers—the obsessive specification of the exact streets and landmarks among which the action takes place: the grubby precinct of London which Moore refers to as “The Boroughs.” A map is provided in the endpapers of the book.
Here’s a typical paragraph:
He gestured drunkenly around them as they reached the bottom of the rough trapezium of hunched-up ground called Castle Hill, where it joined what was left of Fitzroy Street. This last was now a broadened driveway leading down into the shoebox stack of ’Sixties housing where the feudal corridors of Moat Street, Fort Street and the rest once stood. It terminated in a claustrophobic dead-end car park, block accommodation closing in on two sides while the black untidy hedges representing a last desperate stand of Boroughs wilderness, spilled over on a third.
You can follow the action along on the map if you wish, but it doesn’t add a great deal to understanding the novel. Moore specifies street names when a character goes for a walk, including each and every turn. No one ever just walks down a generic street. This pattern is the one thing that annoyed me about his prose because it is so repetitious and mostly irrelevant. But it’s all of a piece with his desire to embed his fantastically baroque story in a thickly woven web of specific detail. His style reminds me of those Medieval illuminated manuscripts in which a text is ornamented with scrolls, flowers, and fantastic beasts crowding all the margins and other spaces into which something decorative can be inserted.
Note how it’s not just a driveway, but a “broadened driveway; not a simple parking lot, but “a claustrophobic dead-end car park.” The vast majority of nouns are modified, often multiply: adjectives and adverbs abound.
For the right sort of reader, the densely ornamented prose is not a forbidding dark hedge, but a maze of wonders. His writing flows nicely, even though reading some of his sentences aloud requires two or more breaths.
He scatters metaphors and similes in profusion throughout the text. For instance, consider the next paragraph:
When this meagre estate had first gone up in Mick and Alma’s early teenage years the cul-d-sac had been a bruising mockery of a children’s playground, with a scaled down maze of blue brick in its centre, built apparently for feeble minded leprechauns, and the autistic cubist’s notion of a concrete horse that grazed eternally nearby, too hard-edged and uncomfortable for any child to straddle, with its eyes an empty hole bored through its temples. Even that, more like the abstract statue of a playground than an actual place, had been less awful than this date-rape opportunity and likely dogging hotspot, with its hasty skim of tarmac spread like cheap, stale caviar across the pink pedestrian tiles beneath, the bumpy lanes and flagstone closes under that. Only the gutter margins where the strata peeled back into sunburn tatters gave away the layers of human time compressed below, ring markings on the long-felled tree stump of the Boroughs. From downhill beyond the car park and the no-frills tombstones of its sheltering apartment blocks there came the mournful shunt and grumble of a goods train with its yelp and mutter rolling up the valley’s sides from the criss-cross self-harm scars of the rail tracks at its bottom.
He piles one figure of speech atop another, explores them in detail, indulges in word-play and creates prose that resembles less a walk along a path than a complex ballet with the reader bewildered in its center. Nothing much “happens” for long stretches, but the verbal action is relentless.
In the world of Jerusalem the images of the dead are often accompanied by a string of after-images trailing and fading out behind them. Time after time Moore comes up with a new simile for this effect, clearly delighting in displaying his fertile imagination. The idea never “goes without saying.”
Many readers will find this sort of thing off-putting; but if, like me, you find it delightful, there’s plenty of it: the novel is 1,262 pages long.
So exquisitely mundane is most of the early narrative that the moments of fantasy leap out shockingly from the page, and even after these have accumulated for hundreds of pages it is stunning to find ourselves halfway through the novel plunged into an extraordinarily detailed and original afterlife world where most of the characters are “dead.”
Much of the subject matter is grim, threatening, haunting (in both figurative and literal senses); but the prose is exuberant, playful, often amusing. Whereas most modern fiction pares away tedious description to immerse us in the action, Moore immerses us in the funhouse of his prose where we’re sometimes in danger of losing track of the plot altogether. In this book the point is in the telling, more than in the tale.
Moore plays all kinds of linguistic games, writing in varied styles including Victorian gothic, Chandleresque hardboiled detective, and the sort of experimental punning mish-mash that makes up James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake in a chapter that embodies the tale of the author’s mad daughter, Lucia:
Awake, Lucia gets up wi’ the wry sing of de light. She is a puzzle, shore enearth, as all the Nurzis and the D’actors would afform, but nibber a cross word these days, deepindig on her mendication and on every workin’ grimpill’s progress.
I count at least ten puns or other sorts of wordplay in these two sentences alone which open the chapter allusively titled “Round the Bend.” It goes on like that for 48 dense pages.
One chapter is written entirely in verse, beginning thus:
Den wakes beneath the windswept porch alone
On bone-hard slab rubbed smooth by Sunday feet
Where afternoon light leans, fatigued and spent,
Ground to which he feels no entitlement
Nor any purchase on the sullen street;
Unpeels his chill grey cheek from chill grey stone
Then orients himself in time and space.
The desire to be oriented in time and space is constantly challenged. Although the novel is structured something like a mystery, there is no culminating Big Reveal. One major hanging plot thread never gets wrapped up at all. The last chapter brings together many scenes and characters earlier touched on, but not in a way that explains everything.
Moore is best known as a writer for DC superhero comic books and as author of the similarly playful historical fantasy The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (the graphic novel, much better than the awful movie). But this is his masterpiece: dazzling, diverting, and utterly delightful.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2018In some ways, it’s impossible to review Jerusalem. The book is a masterpiece! It’s a million words in length and one of the longest books ever written in the English language. Take that, Samuel Richardson! As I said to one friend, how do you review the Mona Lisa or the Churches of Lalibela? You can’t. All a person can do is stand and look at them in awe. Alan Moore didn’t even end up on the short list for the 2016 Noble Prize? This is a cultural crime!
So, you ask, what is this book about? It’s about Moore’s old Northampton neighborhood, which he terms “the boroughs” throughout the book. However, we don’t just see the outer, physical Northampton; we see it as a collection of ectoplasm layers. It’s all part of a multiverse created by the “builders”. These are angelic creatures who work to construct the “mansoul” or continuous reality of the boroughs.
The book jumps all over the place, time-wise, but it does have a point and direction. The end game is to get us to an opening at a local gallery by an artist named Alma Warren. I won’t say any more about the opening, other than Alama is a stand-in, in some ways, for Moore himself. There’s also her brother Mick, whom is headed toward the same direction. However, you’ll have to wade through this massive book yourself to learn how Moore wraps it up. Much of the second section is told from the viewpoint of Michael “Mick” Warren while he undergoes a near-death experience. As a toddler, he swallows a gumdrop and chokes. This incident forces his mother to run for the doctor. However, in the meantime, little Michael has a vision of the ghostly inhabitants of the boroughs. He accompanies a group of spectral children, known as the “Dead Dead Gang”, while they make their rounds. Along the way, we learn about the ghost-steam and how a game of billiards at the top level between is affected by Michael’s existence.
The reader must prepare themselves for Moore’s mastery of dialect:
‘“The ghost-seam’s what it saynds like. It’s a ragged seam what joins the Upstairs to the Dayn-below, and it’s where all the real ghosts ’ang ayt, all the ones what don’t feel comfortable up ’ere. It’s like the Second Borough’s on the top with the First Borough underneath, and in between them there’s the ghost-seam, like when yer go in a pub and all the fag-smoke’s ’anging in the air like a grey blanket, wobblin’ abayt when people move and cause a draught. That’s what the ghost-seam’s like. ’Ere, look ’ere on the right. It’s Spring Lane Terrace, what I said abayt, one of the streets what got pulled dayn to make the playing field.”’
One of the reasons I won’t give away much of the plot is that a certain West Coast reviewer, whom I will not dignify to mention, already has done so. He also turned up his nose at Moore, who wasn’t pure enough for the reviewer’s postmodern brain. I will say no more.
One thing you have to learn while reading this book is that it’s broken up into different writing styles. For instance, there is a whole section that’s inspired by James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake, so if you have issues with idiosyncratic words, grit your teeth and prepare for a long, tough read.
Such as:
“Hi lufts caerphrilly scurthem towar belley, seewish tissuewife hairglossnin’ per se. Eashe clambs patwina prisperation-beauded nays, elucs apter wedjoy unserrow manguilt ennis inklindecent whyes.”
The novel is filled with hordes of memorable characters. I can’t even begin to list them in this review. The major thread is of the Vernall family. Ern Vernall has a bad encounter with an angel in the opening and goes mad as a result. It’s a constant them I the book, as to how one man’s touch of the divine effects his family.
Get used to inmate descriptions of how people lived a hundred years ago in this part of England. I could’ve done with less detail on toilets and how people took care of body waste, but I appreciate Moore’s attention to detail.
Moore soars in the descriptive parts:
“Whatever the real reason, Tommy had been out of sorts with things that night in the Blue Anchor. Him and Frank had run into some chaps Frank knew from work but who Tom weren’t so chummy with, so he’d begun to feel a bit left out and thought perhaps he’d try another pub. Tom had made his apologies to Frank then left him chatting with his mates while he’d put on his coat and stepped out through the pub’s front door into Chalk Lane. It had been very like tonight, with all the fog and everything, but being down there in the Boroughs as opposed to up here on the prosperous Wellingborough Road, it had been a lot eerier. Even St. Edmund’s Church with all its looming tombstones just across the street didn’t give you the shivers, at the stroke of midnight, how some places in the Boroughs could do even by the light of day.”
When Moore writes about his love for his neighborhood, the book shines. He manages to illuminate every small detail where he came of age. It’s no small surprise that he’s one of the best comic book writers in history. I’ve read a number of his essays and they’re all brilliant.
Another one of the main themes in the book is how the people at the top manage to lord it over at those at the bottom. He writes with sadness about how much of the borough was destroyed and torn down after WW1. He talks about how Northampton was always a center of the commoners' rage. This is tied to a monk from the middle ages, who brings a holy relic home from the Mideast.
I give this novel all the stars I can just so people will take the time to read it. Jerusalem is a masterpiece of English literature. It should be taught at every college.
Top reviews from other countries
- ryan pongraczReviewed in Canada on January 27, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Huge, soo many words
Loved his picture books, don't call them graphic novels. Soni had to pick up this massive tomb of just his words, to see how he uses just those to illustrate in my mind. For $15 I had to.
-
nenneyReviewed in Mexico on December 4, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente Libro
Fue un regalo para mi esposo y lo amó ❤️✨
- Ayrton JrReviewed in Brazil on October 10, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Man, I would love to eat a Puck’s Hat!
The image of all Dead Dead Gang straddled on woolly mammoth running along the Mansoul has suffused my mind forever.
-
Manuel CondeReviewed in Spain on May 28, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Libro
Excelente obra de Alan Moore a un precio inmejorable. Es libro, no cómic. El envío llegó rápido
- NogoodboyoReviewed in Australia on January 27, 2024
4.0 out of 5 stars Worth the effort.
I’m just short of 50% of the way through this challenging read. Even though at times confused I am enjoying the challenge. Recommend