Part romance, part cozy mystery, The Pre-Raphaelite Seamstress by Amita Murray
was a thoroughly enjoyable read. The author has done a great deal of research
for the book, and this showed in a number of colorful details as well as rich
settings and backgrounds, glowing with life.
Rachel Faraday is forced to make her own living by painting
fabrics; her influences are Dante Gabriel Rossetti (and yes, the painter does
appear in the novel a lot, and he is wonderful.) She tangles at the start with
Harry Twyfold, brother to one of her customers, and an instant will-they-or-won’t-they
attraction is set up.
However, Twyfold is arrested under suspicion of murder, and
Rachel spends the rest of the novel trying to solve it before Harry is hanged
as a killer. This makes for a bit of a problem for the romance, since the
scenes between the two are in prison and few in number. Murray makes them
count, however, with just the right amount of anger and tension.
Furthermore, the painter Rossetti meets Rachel and takes her
as a student. They develop a relationship of their own, an original combination
of teacher/student and seducer/seduced. It was in those scenes Rachel flowered
as a character; she is forthright, upfront, and bold. The painter himself is
perfect, with a combination of self-assured sensuality and genius, versus a
fleshy air that repels and attracts the artistic Miss Faraday.
When she’s not studying with Rossetti, Rachel is on the case
with Gil, her cousin, and later some new characters she didn’t know were alive
at all. (Spoiler alert – I’ll add this at the bottom under the stars, so don’t
read the final paragraph if you don’t want to spoil the surprise.) Gil spars
perfectly with Rachel, and the scenes in her kitchen with her companion, Magda,
are really funny.
Image Courtesy of The Telegraph |
There were a few chapters that were info dumps, serving up
indigestible chunks of backstory in long paragraphs, but they were necessary to
the story and not mere filler. Anyone who has read and enjoyed Pride and
Prejudice or any Georgette Heyer novel won’t have a problem with those.
As Heyer herself has done, Murray carefully adds real
background, and in a delightful way. One of my favorites was Rachel moving
through a marketplace, speaking to the owners of the stalls:
I dodged chickens,
stilt-walkers, girls dancing the hornpipe egged on by a crowd of engorged men,
a Happy Family hand barrow, and shoeblacks sitting in the middle of it all,
oblivious to the threat of getting crushed in the melee. The crowd forced me to
slow down, and vendors stood in my way, showing off their wares and haggling,
and I kept saying, “Sorry, sorry! This way, please. Sorry, right behind you! I
do apologize. I don’t need a laudanum tincture or battered halibut! Just,
please let me pass!” (2014). The Pre-Raphaelite Seamstress (Kindle
Locations 1063-1067). Amita Murray. Kindle Edition.
There were a few notes that didn’t quite ring true: Gil
apologizing to a stall keeper – a woman at that. Since he is higher in society,
I can’t imagine that happening in the nineteenth century. Furthermore, the
comfortable conversations between Rachel, Gil, and Magda would never happen in
that rigidly structured society. However, I can see those conversations add to
the plot, so if you’re willing to overlook some faults of accuracy, you will
really enjoy the book.
Another example is Rachel’s “sunflower yellow” teapot. I’ve
had tea poured from many a pot in England, and I’ve never seen a yellow one. So
I did some extensive research of my own to look at typical pots of the period,
and they were mainly brown, like my own Brown Betty pot. Also, a character invites
Rachel to look through her own bedroom upstairs – something I just can’t
imagine happening today, let alone in Victorian England.
But look at me, niggling over details… in doing so I’m
definitely missing the forest for the trees. Just taste the way the author
describes the area of London near Rossetti’s studio:
The lights mingled
with the chimes of St. Paul’s, and the calls of the barges near London Bridge,
scuttling coal and bricks, sand and timber. The grime, the soot, the
pickpockets, the stench, the prostitutes with peeling skin and a dry pain
between their legs – these didn’t disappear in this new London, but merged into
it. I would watch a mudlark trawling through the rubbish down in the street,
picking out lost pieces of coal from between the rats, the broken china, the
refuse, and even that seemed like a natural part of the life that made up the
city. I would watch an urchin scavenging for a piece of bread. A cat staring at
me with its green-amber eyes before disappearing into the fog. It was magical.
It was real. For those hours that I spent in Rossetti’s studio, I could
reconcile to living in London and not have the constant feeling of wanting to
be elsewhere. (2014). The Pre-Raphaelite Seamstress (Kindle Locations
1280-1286). Amita Murray. Kindle Edition.
…With writing like that, I can afford to ignore the yellow
teapot and the ersatz boudoir visits.
In the end, there are a few chapters that felt ‘off’ to me.
One was with the spoiler I mentioned before: it is so dramatic it falls into
maudlin category. Overall, however, I was captivated by the book and thoroughly
enjoyed it. I give it a solid four stars and recommend it as a lovely novel for
those who love the era, the art, and original romance.
*****
SPOILER - Highlight this bit if you want read it: The novel became somewhat banal when Rachel’s mother
entered the scene. Her appearance was so extraordinary and led to events which
simply didn’t flow for me. I see she introduced some key plot elements, but I
wish the author could have found a more natural way of doing it.
2 comments:
Sounds like an awesome book! I love both Rossetti AND Heyer so having the two combined sounds quite intriguing!
I really enjoyed it. There's a sequel coming soon as well, so - yay!
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