The second of Leon Garfield’s excellent Apprentices series is the tale of Daniel Nightingale, just arrived in London from the Hertfordshire countryside to be apprenticed to Mr Paris, a skilled maker of ornate mirror frames. It’s a neater, safer story than The Lamplighter’s Funeral, but the portrayal of young Dan, far from home and having to make the best of things as he begins his seven year apprenticeship and a new life in the home of a strange family is sensitively handled. The crux of the story - how, with the help of another apprentice, he gets his own back on Mr Paris’s bullying daughter - is a delight, enhanced by Antony Maitland’s exceptional illustrations, but lacks the emotional intensity of the first book in the series.