Published by Allison & Busby,
23 May 2024.
ISBN: 978-0-74902-315-2 (HB)
This
story was inspired by the extraordinary cabinet of curiosities in the Hunterian
Museum in London. It is a Victorian melodrama with overtones of Blue
Beard and Gothic horror. It is set in the late Victorian period when
medical experimentation was at its height and continues to fascinate readers
today.
The main character is Madeleine Brewster who marries a Dr Lucius Everley at the
beginning of the story. She is a rather innocent young girl who is
strongly encouraged to marry the doctor as a means of improving her family's
standing in the community. There are strong hints of malign intent from
the very beginning and the house she is meant to be the mistress of is run by
an unpleasant couple Mr and Mrs Barker who do not allow Madeleine any control
over her life in this oppressive house. She is very lonely, and her only
friendship is with Caroline the wife of another doctor and her maid, Tizzy.
Madeleine is curious about her husband's work as a collector of natural
curiosities and tries to help him by offering her services as an accomplished
artist. As she learns more about his small museum of bones and specimens
in jars, she becomes increasingly worried about the true origins of these
items. Madeleine becomes pregnant and is hopeful that perhaps at last she
and Lucius can form a proper family. However, her fears increase as her
maid is removed and her sister-in-law becomes ever more unpleasant. Her
baby is apparently still born although Madeleine knows she has been drugged and
has no memory of the birth. She is not allowed to see her baby.
We are then transported to the Marlborough Assizes where Madeleine is on trial for her life having been accused of murdering her baby. This is a truly frightening account of what it must have been like for Victorian prisoners in gaol at that time. Her friend Caroline is determined to help her’
This is a dark tale, with a Gothic setting. An exhilarating read -
I loved it - and can thoroughly recommend it to any readers who enjoy the
thrill of a drama set in Victorian England and with an immense amount of
research into the age of discoveries of fossils and bones which of course
continues to this day.
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Reviewer: Toni Russell
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