With or Without Angels – Douglas Bruton (2023) 107 pages
Having loved Hope Never Knew Horizon by Douglas Bruton when I read it in February for #ReadIndies, I was keen to try more by him. With or Without Angels is an intriguing novella, attempting to capture the process of creating art at the end of life.
Written in the third person but mainly from the point of view of “the old artist”, Bruton portrays Alan Smith’s memories and thoughts as he works on his final piece, The New World, which was a response to Giandomenico Tieplo’s Il Mondo Nuovo. (In the Afterword Bruton explains that Alan’s widow had read the novella and she encouraged publication, with permission for the art to be reproduced.)
The New World is a series of images and they are reproduced in the book, after the fictional prose passages which evoke the creation of them. So for the first one, a photograph taken on a trip to Tate Modern:
“Out on the street the air was wet and chill and shifting. It smelled of bus exhausts and damp wool and faintly of cigarettes. And his wife it smelled of, too. Something with flowers in her perfume. Patchouli maybe – a shrub of the mint family – something of wet soil or apples that are past ripe, the smell of a cork pulled from a bottle of strong red wine. It’s the last of the senses to go, smell. He had heard that somewhere and was comforted that when all else failed he would know his wife was at his side by her smell.”
The smell of patchouli is something that is returned to at different sections along with other recurring motifs. This was so clever; it evoked the layering of memory and movement back and forth in time as someone contemplates the past from a present where they know their future is limited. (Also, a special thank you to the woman who stood next to me on the tube and was wearing patchouli as I read this 😊)
Time collapses in on itself at various points for the artist, disorienting but without him losing sight of his work.
“Some things are so familiar that you expect them to be there even when they are not and cannot be. The blue hat had been eaten into holes by moths. But he is sure that he has seen it hanging on the last hook in the hall as recently as a week ago.”
Bruton never attempts to interpret the work or lay claim to an absolute meaning in The New World. He is too subtle for that, and part of what With or Without Angels explores is that there are no final answers to be gleaned from a work of art.
“It’s not that he fears the questions. He wants them to be asked. That’s part of the point. It’s the answers that he frets over. He has come to a time in his life where the answers are like Brighton’s running pebbles under his feet.”
There’s also no sentimentality in the artist nearing the end of his life. Instead it is a gentle, tender, compassionate portrait.
“The thing she did with her hair […] and how he felt when he saw her do that, somehow there was meaning and hope and love in that. The old artist does not tell anyone this, not even his wife, but maybe she knows.”
With or Without Angels captures so much in so few pages. It is a remarkable work which manages to explore enormous themes with such a light touch, without ever seeming superficial.
The New World link at the start of this post will take you to Alan Smith talking about the work.

I loved this book too and enjoyed reading your review to remind myself of what is so special about it. It really was a very moving and beautiful book.
Wishing you happy reading for another 28 books; I am very impressed!
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So pleased you enjoyed this one too.
Probably best not to be impressed yet, I’ve not done it and it always looks a bit shaky 🤣 but thank you very much for your good wishes 🤗
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Well, I’m delighted this popped up in my reader. I hadn’t expected a Novella a Day (won’t hold you to that) and it’s Douglas Bruton. Lovely coincidence on the tube, too.
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Thanks Susan 😊 it was lovely to have the smell of patchouli at exactly the right time!
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That was my favourite bit too! I wonder, does she simply ride it all day long, just waiting for someone else to be reading this book?
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Haha! What an amazing service she provides if so!
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This seems a very tender book and not a writer I’ve come across before now; what an incredibly serendipitous moment, amazing!
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Yes it really is Jane. He’s a lovely writer.
It was serendipitous, I was very grateful!
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How funny, I also read a Douglas Bruton novella for Day 3! Might not manage to review until I’m back from bank hol weekend
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Oh great! Have a lovely time Simon, I’ll look forward to hearing your thoughts when you post.
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This sounds wonderful, Madame Bibi–and it reminds me I have another art-themed Bruton, Woman in Blue waiting on my TBR and I’m going to try and get to it soon. And that I hope will only be the first in a chain! Glad to see you do this challenge again. I have yet to catch up with your reviews.
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So glad this appeals Mallika! I definitely want to read Woman in Blue too. I’ll look forward to hearing how you find it.
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You’re so right Madame B – he’s a subtle writer and this is a remarkable book (as are all of his that I’ve read tbh). His work really gets under the skin.
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It really does, doesn’t it? His is a quiet voice but such an authentic, powerful one.
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