I was so impressed by the first Inspector Monk book that I dashed to the library to get the next two in the series, of which this is #2. I have to admit I did not find it quite so entertaining as the first, but the promise is still there. The anticipated blossoming romance between William Monk and Hester Latterly does not seem to be going too well (they still don’t like each other), and Monk’s performance here as a detective seems less than stellar (at the end of the novel, Monk is standing outside the house, fired and disgraced, while Sergeant Evan does the arresting), but I shall definitely continue with the series.
The real interest in this novel is the depiction of the interrelationships between the upper and lower classes of Victorian society, in this case largely confined to a single family household: a couple, their three children and the latter’s marriage partners (one already deceased), the brother of the wife and the sister of the husband, and two grandchildren … and the servants: the cook, the butler, the housekeeper, two ladies’ maids, the scullery maid, the kitchen maid, the upstairs maid, the between-stairs maid, two laundrymaids, the parlormaid, the bootboy, the groom, and the footman (and there might have been two each of the last two). All of these had names, of course, and I found it difficult to keep; them all straight in my head (particularly because sometimes they were identified by first name and sometimes by title/surname) … all mixed up with the overflow of characters from the preceding book, from Hester’s friend & mentor, Lady Callandra Daviot; Monk’s superior, the disagreeable Runcorn; Sergeant Evans; and the lawyer, Oliver Rathbone, not to mention Dr. Pomeroy, Hester’s new superior, plus a couple minor characters brought in for a page or two. In case you lost count, that is 34 or more different characters, which is a bit more than I can keep straight in my head!
The chilling differences between high society and the lower classes (which to the members of high society meant everyone who was not) is striking. I am aware at all times that I am reading this as a 21st-century citizen of the United States with 20th-century beliefs and attitudes, whereas it is written by a Scottish woman who may find the social classes more familiar but is describing the society and culture that lived more than a century previously, but it is an education, nevertheless. It is sometimes confusing but always interesting--and once again I find myself glad I did not live in that time. It is clear that Ms. Perry has done a lot of research into contemporary language, devices, and warfare activities, and I have to presume that the depiction is largely accurate and true-to-life … and I would rather live here and now.