
The Book Club Francis Spufford: Nonesuch
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Feb 25, 2026 Francis Spufford, novelist and essayist best known for inventive literary fantasies, chats about his new wartime fantasy Nonesuch. He discusses C.S. Lewis and Charles Williams influences. He explains building a vivid 1940s London, writing a female protagonist to push back on the Inklings, and mixing angels, occult Nazis and Technicolor romance.
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Writing For Pleasure As A Serious Aim
- Francis Spufford wrote Nonesuch deliberately to prioritise pleasure alongside serious themes.
- He distinguishes books that only aim for weight from those that unapologetically pack in every pleasurable element he enjoys thinking about.
Responding To The Inklings Through A Female Lead
- Nonesuch is in conversation with C.S. Lewis and Charles Williams but also quietly argues with them.
- Spufford wanted a female protagonist who enjoys lipstick and nylons, explicitly countering the Inklings' uneasy portrayals of women.
Anchor Fantasy In Exact Historical Detail
- Do rigorous historical research to ground fantasy in believable detail.
- Spufford walked the Square Mile with 1939–40 maps, used postcards from the Monument and mentally removed modern towers to authenticate both mundane and supernatural elements.












