Trung Quốc tổ chức giải đấu “Quidditch” đời thực lớn nhất hành tinh: Hơn 1.000 đội drone tranh tài khốc liệt
Mercedes-AMG tất tay vào canh bạc xe điện: Siêu SUV 1.000 mã lực và tham vọng định hình lại cuộc chơi tốc độ
Lỗi sơ đẳng trên đường đèo khiến tài xế gây tai nạn chết người
Samsung ra mắt điện thoại pin 6.000mAh, chip Dimensity, giá rẻ chỉ hơn 3 triệu
Your Life Without Me by James Meek review – angel of destruction haunts a domestic drama
A plot to blow up St Paul’s Cathedral is seen through the lens of family tragedy
A great demolition is also an act of creation, so long as its execution is bold and impressive enough, so long as it clears out the dead wood and opens up the terrain. It’s the ethos that links Pablo Picasso to 1970s punk, Shiva the Destroyer to the anarchist hero of Joseph Conrad’s The Secret Agent. Rip it up and start again. Or rip it up for the pure thrill of the ripping. In Graham Greene’s short story The Destructors, the schoolboy vandals of the Wormsley Common Gang systematically unpick a Christopher Wren-designed London house, working from the inside out so that it dissolves into rubble the moment a supporting post is pulled down. The crime’s one adult witness, a lorry driver, guffaws at the sight. “I’m sorry, I can’t help it,” he tells the home’s distraught owner. “There’s nothing personal, but you got to admit it’s funny.”
Raf, the angel of destruction who haunts the wings of James Meek’s graceful, death-haunted domestic drama, is likewise drawn to the work of Wren – although his project is conceived on a much grander scale. Raf is a professional demolition man, a gifted young engineer and natural born radical, easily moved to laughter or tears and effortlessly dazzling everyone in his orbit. For his PhD project, he has been granted free run of St Paul’s Cathedral in order to test the old building’s resistance to modern traffic vibration. He drills discreet holes in the masonry to install movement censors. But he also packs the cavities with Semtex.





