Norwich,1901. Twelve year old Edith Holler spends her days among the eccentric denizens of the Holler Theatre, warned by her domineering father that the playhouse will literally tumble down if she should ever leave, thanks to a Curse made at her birth by a mad aunt.
Fascinated by tales of Norwich that she knows only from the windows and rooftop of the theatre, Edith decides to write a play of her own about Mawther Meg, a monstrous figure said to have used the blood of countless children to make the local delicacy, Beetle Spread. But when her father suddenly announces his engagement to a peculiar woman named Margaret Unthank, Edith scrambles to protect her father, the theatre, and her play – the one thing that’s truly hers – from the newcomer’s sinister designs.
I read Edward Carey's Little - the story of an orphan in Revolutionary Paris who ultimately transforms herself into Madame Tussaud - a few years ago, and found it a really compelling, so I was interested and curious to see where this latest novel would take me.
Like Little, Edith Holler is dark and grotesque, and is peppered with Carey's unique and quirky illustrations. They perfectly match the quirky, witty and wryly humorous writing, which is threaded through with a constant vein of humour, an element which proves to be really important for the novel to work, given how, by turns, the story is surreal, horrific, macabre, dark and sad. (Perfect October reading in many ways!)
The author is a playwright as well as a novelist and this informs and shapes the world of the novel, providing its setting, and also its structure, which is written in five acts.
It has a huge cast of characters who are all larger than life, and who mostly range between freakish, sinister, weak, cruel and unlikeable, though there are some who gain the sympathies of the reader.
Set as it is in the world of the theatre, the novel revolves around stories, storytelling, and great drama such as Shakespeare as well as local legend and folklore.
This is a novel built around the concept of belief - of believing, or not believing - as themes of truth and illusion, image and perception, performance and reality, are explored. As it does so, it requires a big suspension of disbelief on behalf of the reader.
Some prior knowledge of Norwich's history and folklore - or a propensity for Google research - is another requirement which would enable the reader to better appreciate the nuances, allusions and references which abound in this novel.
Power and agency are central to the story of Edith Holler. Margaret Utting has claimed for herself enormous agency and power, whilst initially Edith has none. She is trapped by superstition, bound by tradition and legacy, and lives in a world of drama and stories.
Controlled by her family, she has no freedom beyond the theatre, her view and perception of the real world is shaped and determined by her hidebound existence, and the things she views from her window and the theatre roof. Her story is one of realisation and the journey towards gaining control of her own life and destiny.
If your tastes lean towards cleverly constructed, well observed literary fiction that is dark, disturbing and eccentric, Edith Holler could well be the read you're looking for.
Thank you so much to Claire Handscombe at Gallic Books for my AD-GIFTED copy.
3.75 stars rounded up to 4.