And breathe !!!!
The Corset is a breath-taking story of a young girl, Ruth who stands accused of the murder of her mistress. A vulnerable girl whose life was changed beyond recognition when entering a life of service after the death of her father. A story set in Victorian England, that combines an atmospheric historical setting, with heavy themes of poverty, death, betrayal, and abuse and told with great sentiment and purpose. A story that will leave you breathless, outraged, and sympathetic but all the time questioning the innocence or guilt of this unusual but vulnerable character.
The Plot
Dorothea is a 25-year-old woman living with her widowed father. A woman who sees her calling beyond marriage, to live out acts of corporeal mercy: to feed the hungry, refresh the thirsty, visit the imprisoned and bury the dead. It was this compassion, and her interest in phrenology that brought Dotty to Ruth who stands accused of murdering her mistress. Dammed by her own tongue, Ruth confesses to making a corset that killed her torturer and mistress Kate. A death that would have been hard to explain as some form of evil magic or witchcraft, but with a confession to having woven poison into the corset with her threads, Ruth’s fate is all but sealed.
The question of Ruth’s innocence is played out against the backdop of a girl who is struggling to make sense of the loss, brutality and ugliness of life and starts to believe that to wish people dead she seems to somehow be able to make it happen through her embroidery. Yet, her father’s suicide and her mother death in a debtor’s prison, and the death of her infant sister through malnutrition, all seem to exonerate Ruth from any kind of wrongdoing. However, the twists to the story prevent us from having a clear view as we are left pondering if Ruth is a prisoner twisted and stubborn beyond the reach of redemption or a young girl forced to grow up beyond her years and endure suffering at the hands of the very people that were meant to protect her and those that are about to betray her.
Review and Comments
The historical references in the book were so believable and accurately reflective of Victorian England and the period. The gas lights, chamber pots, attitude towards young women being married by a certain age, and the social demographic and economic divisions within society.
The plot was well thought through and brilliantly narrated, with superb twists that made the story so absorbing and thought provoking. The writing was superb, and the characters were so well drawn, in particular Ruth, who is portrayed as both vulnerable and menacing. Mad or a murderer?, A victim or a villain?. I knew I would feel invested in this gifted girl from the outset regardless of the outcome or her demise.
4.5 stars because the story slowed down in the middle, and I was willing the pace to pick up again which it did as we headed for a captivating ending. However, for a story that was so skilfully woven and vividly depicted, I am rounding up. Gripping, thrilling and atmospheric with suspense that was accretive and perpetuating.
And now breathe….