Little Bones
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- £4.99
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- £4.99
Publisher Description
It's 1899 and a young girl is abandoned in London by her feckless family. She finds lodging and work assisting a doctor. But Jane Stretch is no ordinary girl, and Mr Swift is no ordinary doctor.
Jane does her best to keep up with the doctor, her twisted bones throbbing, as they hurry past the markets, stage doors and side shows to appointments in certain boarding houses across town. The young actresses who live there have problems, and Mr Swift does what is required, calmly and discreetly. Grateful to her benefactor and his wife, Jane assists him and asks no questions - the desperate women not minding that it is a cripple girl who wipes their brows.
When this unlikely pair becomes involved with Johnny Treble, a rakish music hall star, and the police come knocking, it seems that Jane's spell of good fortune is unlikely to last...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this atmospheric historical novel set in 1899 London, Jenkins (Firefly) evokes the ambience of a Dickens novel. Fifteen-year-old Jane Stretch is intelligent, hardworking, and a "cripple." After her family abandons her, she finds work and lodging with a doctor she will act as his assistant and his wife, who never leaves their shabby house. Showgirls from the theater seek Mr. Swift's medical services to remove "obstructions," also known as "inconveniences." He provides them a tincture to drink, leaving Jane with them as they miscarry. Without this position, Jane would likely end up as a beggar or in the workhouse, so she does what she is told, never considering the ramifications of her involvement in an illegal activity. Every other chapter flashes back to Jane's childhood with her ne'er-do-well parents and flighty older sister. Jane notes with alarm her employer's decline into alcoholism, which in conjunction with Mrs. Swift's agoraphobia foreshadows the trouble to come. The novel's ending avoids the melodrama typical of Dickens's work and aims for a more realistic denouement to suit the ugliness of Jane's life, but the result is heavy-handed. The vividness of the story's setting is more successful than the story itself.