Like much of G.K Chesterton's work, his first novel, The Napoleon of Notting Hill, reflects his anti-imperialist distaste for centralised power and a mistrust of the modem world of business. He sees these as life-denying forces, and his novel celebrates the oddity of life and the romantic medievalism of an earlier, pre-industrial age. When it was published in 19o4, the originality of this thematic political fantasy immediately attracted the attention and admiration that it still merits today.……
Set in a future of stultifving dullness, the ordinary citizen Auberon Quin is chosen from a list to be King. His whimsical desire to inspire local patriotism in the London boroughs seems an outrageous and hilarious prank as he lectures to an antiquarian society on the significance of London place names, and designs uniforms of medieval style and vast discomfort for the provosts of the boroughs. But Adam Wayne, the provost of Notting Hill who has no sense of humour at all, wears his red robes with pride and his fanaticism soon has the city plunged into savage street warfare.
BOOK ONE
ONE Introductory Remarks on the Art of Prophecy
TWO The Man in Green
THREE The Hill of Humonr
BOOK TWO
ONE The Charter of the Cities
TWO The Council of the Provosts
THREE Enter a Lunatic
BOOK THREE
ONE The Mental Condition of Adam Wayne
TWO The Remarkable Mr Turnlrull
THREE The Experiment of Mr.Buck
BOOK FOUR
ONE The Battle of the Lamps
TWO The Correspondent of the Court Journal
THREE The Great Army of South Kensington
BOOK FIVE
ONE The Empire of Notting Hill
TWO The Last Battle
THREE Two Voices