It's Thanksgiving, 1954 and blood is soaking into the threadbare carpet of an upstairs apartment at Briarwood, a boarding house for ladies in a leafy Washington D. C. neighborhood. The air reeks of paranoia and mistrust—this is the McCarthy Era, after all. The wrong friends, the wrong social or political leanings could land you in the cold water of the Cold War, accused of harboring Communist sympathies. But the gang gathered at Briarwood House are friends: the eight women who live their complicated, secret lives in tiny flats, the two children and their mother who tend Briarwood (okay, the mother is comically awful), and assorted male hangers-on pulled to Briarwood by a few of its irresistible residents.
The Briar Club circles back to that murderous Thanksgiving with stories that unspool over 400 delightful, character-full, detail-rich pages. We come to know each of Briarwood's residents and how they landed in this genteel Southern city that is also seat of American political power. Elegant Nora, escaping an overbearing Irish-American clan, yet she can't escape the notice of an enigmatic mobster. Irreverent Bea, a former pro baseball player who still dreams of the sandlot. Perky Fliss, a new mother and wife of a surgeon serving in Korea, whose adorable little girl is slowly driving her insane. And then there is inscrutable Grace, who, from her tiny attic room, notices all of the house's goings-on and breaks nearly all of its rules. She starts a Thursday Night Supper Club that brings all the women and their landlord's two browbeaten kids together while their shrew of a landlord/mother is out for her weekly bridge game.
The characters' intrigues that intersect and spin together make for a rich, history-driven story. Kate Quinn capitalizes on all the complications of the era: the emotional and political aftermath of World War II, only a few years distant; the confusing situation in distant Korea; the bewildering paranoia coming from the halls of Congress, and the cultural shift as women explore more independent lives. Many of the characters are based on historical figures and Quinn gives them vivid, full-bodied life. She probes issues of race, class, gender, political corruption, and domestic abuse, and yet imbues the narrative with easy touches of elegance and humor (Briarwood House itself plays a small but keen role in the story!).
This was a perfect read for me: historical fiction wrapped around a mystery, with well-developed characters, wonderful writing, and a warm, empathetic, intelligent delivery (and recipes!).