Atmospheric depiction of a bygone era with romance and substance in a time of uncertainty. Captivating and well-written.
Although historical romance is not my usual genre of choice I could not resist One Enchanted Evening, the debut novel of Anton du Beke, and my gamble paid off as I was utterly captivated and thoroughly entertained by this sweeping romance with far more substance that I had envisioned from a time when the ballroom of the central to the social lives of the great and good of the British establishment. Contrary to my expectations the novel had depth with a hotbed of sordid secrets amongst a cast of vivid characters waiting to be exposed and the looming threat of war on the horizon. Well-written and highly readable, it is not only an excellent debut effort but a charming depiction of a bygone era and a time when class divisions dictated one’s place in life and reputation was everything.
August 1936 and the Buckingham Hotel is experiencing a resurgence of fortunes with the majority share ownership of wealthy Lord Edgerton three years previously coinciding with the opening of the Grand Ballroom, the advent of dancers and the magic of the twenty-strong Archie Adams Band. The pinnacle and crowning glory is destined to be the Grand Masquerade Ball due to be held on New Year’s Night when His Majesty King Edward will be gracing the ballroom with his presence and film stars, government ministers and landed gentry will be entertained by a troupe of exceptional ballroom dancers. But behind the palatial facade towering seven storey above Berkeley Square, London and housing two-hundred bedrooms and twenty-six suites are a small army of staff from dancers to pages and chambermaids, each with their own stories, pasts and secrets.. As they attempt to protect their secrets from disclosure and witness indiscretions by guests in a world where information is currency, 1936 is a year destined to bring irrevocable change for them all. First amongst these is thirty-year-old debonair principal male dancer, Raymond de Guise and his elegant partner, Hélėne Marchmont who eschewed Hollywood for a ballroom career. For both these magnificent stars stepping outside of the Buckingham Hotel brings risks and the threat of exposing secrets with the potential to ruin their career. Overseeing the hotel is an eagerly attentive hotel director in Maynard Charles, with an impertinent twenty-four-year-old new Lancastrian chambermaid, Nancy Nettleton, toiling to the point of exhaustion and an enterprising seventeen-year-old page in Lambeth lad, Billy Brogan, who is privy to everything that goes on behind the scenes...
As the lives of staff intertwine with the lives of guests alike a wealthy dowager brings mixed memories of his childhood home for Raymond with the power to shatter his carefully crafted image in the Grand Ballroom and the spoilt and spiteful stepdaughter of Lord Edgerton, eighteen-year-old Vivienne, plots to usurp Hélėne after her advances towards Raymond are spurned. Exiled from the home that her mother and stepfather occupy, Miss Edgerton is a permanent guest at the Buckingham but as she dabbles in hedonistic pleasures and causes mayhem for those at her service she takes umbrage at kindly Nancy and holds Billy to ransom with the livelihood of his brood of siblings dependent on his continued employment.. As Nancy comes to recognise, her entrance to the Buckingham Hotel brings a new set of rules entirely that are divided by money and class and it is no understatement when she observes that “the Buckingham Hotel just shows England up for what it really is”, effectively being a microcosm of society at the time. But as she catches the eye of Raymond de Guise and dreams of dancing, whether her gammy leg and slippery head concierge and utter snake, Mr Simenon, holds her back is another matter... And is there more to the chemistry between Raymond on the dance floor with radiant Hélène or is there truth in the rumours of her clandestine love affair after hours and outside of the splendour of the Buckingham? And just what is Maynard Charles so keen to keep hidden behind the doors of the Park Suite? Frequented by a clientele of politicians, establishment dignitaries and influential magnates, the conversation of the guests has the power to change the political landscape for the worse.. unless the overworked staff can undermine their efforts, expose their scheming and remain loyal to their country.
Some secrets are more readily apparent than others but a brisk pace keeps the dramas unfolding with characters to love and loathe in equal measure. They are all grounded in reality and I could empathise with all their turmoils and angst, albeit from a very different era. As the ugly face of fascism looms du Beke succeeds in conveying the implications for a cast of realistic, flawed and well-fleshed out characters. As we are drawn deeper into their lives the plot encompasses not just a romance, but dilemmas and challenges for them all and evinces the camaraderie behind the family of staff at the Buckingham Hotel. With characters to boo, hiss and champion, One Enchanted Evening captures the magnificence and the unseemly underbelly of a society in the years building up to World War II.
As the abdication of the king takes the lustre off the Masquerade Ball and the passions and history of the staff spoils threatens to besmirch the reputation of the Buckingham Hotel this absorbing story builds to a sensational climax with the New Year’s Day celebrations. Can the staff pull together and overcome their personal woes to deliver a night of splendour? One Enchanted Evening is a marvellously compelling read and a homage to a bygone age full of colourful characters with a richly drawn hotel and ballroom to visualise. Step into a world of glitz, glamour and dancing alongside the hard-working and committed people who keep the Buckingham Hotel functioning. I would welcome a sequel catching up with the lives of the characters in the years after 1936 and if Anton du Beke goes on to pen more novels then I will certainly keep an eye out for them. An unexpected delight and an assured debut!
With thanks to Readers First who provided me with a free copy of this novel in exchange for my honest and unbiased opinion.