3.5 stars
Thanks to NetGalley and the Editor. I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review
This book is perfect for spooky season, even if it is not a horror. I think that we can call it gothic, but it will be stretching things a bit. But even so, this book is chilling. And it is built like a thriller of sorts, because we meet our MC, Lily, while she is in an asylum. We learn pretty soon that she is accused of murder, but we don’t know anything else. We start to piece together what happened in reverse, piecing together what is happening now and what happened in the past.
And the story takes its sweet time to tell us more, because we get to see the life inside the asylum, and we get to learn Lily’s story while she is telling it to her new psychologist (I don’t know if the term is correct for the historical period, but you get what I am saying). Her diagnosis is of hysteria (unbelievable, right?), and if she had stayed in jail instead of the hospital, her punishment would be nearing the end, but since she is now a patient in the mental facility, nobody can say when she will be released.
So she starts therapy with a new doctor. I think she is the first in the whole asylum to try that, but don’t quote me on that. But this is the era where the first women start to go to university and start to work too. And on these notes, the author does an amazing job with all the women we meet in the book. They are all different, they have different backgrounds and jobs and stories and dreams, but they all have problems, since society is not really so good with women, and we get to see them all. And the author’s touch here is pretty light. And I don’t mean that she doesn’t give them importance, but that she manages to give them the right weight even when they are in the background.
This book has some deeper themes, all linked to the women and their condition at the time (but some things are not really era-dependent. It is quite easy to see some of our “modern” problems reflected in these pages, too), and it has a compelling story. Lily is not really the most reliable narrator, but even if she is not always honest when she is talking to other people, she is more honest when she talks with us.
Usually dual timelines aren’t my favourite, but sometimes they are the only way to tell a story, and in this case I quite enjoyed it, especially because the past timeline is encased in the present one, because we see the past when Lily recounts it.
I compared this one to a thriller but the comparison is not complete, because we have some twists here but… they are not really so unexpected, you may not know the details, but it’s pretty clear what will happen from time to time, there aren’t big revelations or surprises, the story is… predictable. I am a bit unsure about using “predictable” as the right word here, because I don’t want to imply anything negative with it, because I think that the point here is not the surprise or the novelty or the shocking value of the story. The point is Lily’s story, and like her, the story of so many other women, so… I just wanted to make sure to not create wrong expectations.
Anyway, as I said before, I think this is the perfect read for spooky season, even if we don’t really have horror elements (we have horrifical elements, but they are there because humans can be the worst creatures around, simple as that) and I am quite happy to have read it. Also… the cover is captivating!