Opening in 1888 in the destitution and squalor of Cheapside “The Cockney Sparrow” is the compelling story of Clemency Skinner a gifted young woman with a beautiful soprano voice who provides for her mother a drunk prostitute and a crippled brother as a pick pocket.
Threatened by her mother’s abusive pimp, Clemency takes action moving her family to a rooming house on Flower and Dean Street in Spitalfields, Jack the Ripper territory where she joins a roving band of buskers. Disguised as a boy, her voice and personality winning admirers in the streets as well as within her musical troupe she’s not only able to feed her family but is given a chance to join a production at the Strand Theatre.
Yet as in all emotionally gripping stories troubles continue to stalk Clemency when she’s lured into working for Jared Stone after her mother’s near- fatal abortion, escaping the vicious pursuit of Todd Hardiman and with the promise of a possible cure for her brother’s disability.
Set within an historical framework, this well written plot flows seamlessly as Clemency dreaming of pursuing a singing career gets swept up in Jared Stone’s vendetta against a French aristocrat while struggling to keep her family safe from the cruelty of her mother’s former pimp. Intensity and suspense escalate with her mother’s bad choices as Clemency bargains with a new adversary using her pick pocketing skills and losing more than she bargained in the process. Yet Dilly Cork skillfully defuses the pain and suffering with tender moments as Jack finds hope and love, Clemency passion, and their mother the affection of an honourable man. And sprinkled throughout are splashes of humor with Clemency and Fancy’s verbal sparring.
Dilly Court has a talent for creating memorable and complex characters like Clemency a spirited, wary and fearless young woman with the voice of a nightingale; her vulnerable, talented brother Jack Skinner who’s a good judge of character; the decent, kind and honourable Ned Hawkes and his mother Nell; as well as arrogant, astute Jared Stone an aristocratic criminal with a heart. All infuse the plot with depth and passion; or like the cruel, bully Todd Hardiman and the ruthless and sinister Monsieur Marceau add a dark chill.
I enjoyed “The Cockney Sparrow” a captivating and intriguing story by a talented author.