I think this tale of a bookseller’s apprentice and his unlikely romance with the ink-stained printer’s devil from a local printing shop may well be the most perfect story so far in Leon Garfield’s wonderful series of twelve linked (literally) tales about life among the apprentice class in Georgian London. That it is beautifully written and illustrated almost goes without saying, but there is so much of London life crammed into its fifty pages that reading it feels like having a privileged window into another world. The story features a book written by a strange and earnest man who is willing to pay for it to be privately printed as the subject is so urgent and important. There are echoes of Blake in his expose of London’s ‘chartered streets’ which prove too much for the church and state, to the extent that all copies of his book are seized and destroyed. But this being Garfield, there’s more to the story than that and a happy ending into the bargain.