My heart feels so heavy after reading this book. This book is very well-written but it's a LOT. I enjoyed the last book because bad things weren't necessarily happening TO my favorite characters but the same cannot be said here. They had everything thrown at them and it's not a light read. Thankfully, I was listening to this on audiobook, so that helped me get through a lot of the more depressing parts. You shouldn't attempt to read this book in one sitting, but I do recommend this book as a good way to close out Tom and Kitty's story for now. I think the door is open just enough for the author to come back to them at some point, but we can all agree that these characters have earned some peace and quiet after a very trying ordeal.
Content warnings include abuse, attempted drowning, death, kidnapping, misogyny, murder, narcissist, PTSD, racism, sexual assault, slavery, suicide, violence, surprise pregnancy, forced birth, mentions of rape, and being locked in a madhouse.
***The following review contains spoilers.***
A lot of things are happening in this book but they do tie together eventually. After the blackmail material Tom got on Queen Caroline in book 3, I thought she would put up more of a fight, but we actually never hear from her again in this book. She is not the big bad in this book.
I did, however, have an inkling we would be getting more of Kitty's story, because her past had always been such a mystery and then the first chapter literally is just Tom recapping what little he did know about her, as if to bring us up to speed. Also, life was going well for them which is never a good way to start out a mystery book where terrible things happen to the main character.
They are visited by an old pain in the ass, Sir John Gonson, a magistrate who wanted nothing more than seeing Tom hanged in a previous book. And here, he is yet again a nuisance. He wants to "save" Kitty and to turn her into an honest woman. For she is unwed, wealthy, and seemingly shacked up with Tom running a bookshop selling erotic books. All this is an unforgivable sin. His first order of business is getting Tom and Kitty to burn their more salacious books in the middle of the street for all to see. I guess nothing changes in hundreds of years, there's always someone who wants to see books banned just because they themselves don't like what's in them. Tom remarks on the irony that some of the same people in the Reformation of Manners cheering the book burning are also frequent customers to Kitty's shop.
So, already we're dealing with Gonson's harassment but we know him. Our faves have outsmarted him before. I thought he would be the only villain in this book, but no. He's low hanging fruit compared to the TRUE villain. And this is where Kitty's past comes back to haunt everyone I like.
Remember when Samuel Fleet, spy and assassin for the Crown and once Tom's roommate in the Marshalsea? Well, for whatever noble and misguided reasons he had (love can do that to anyone I suppose), his inaction now makes it everybody's problem.
So, as a sidenote. There are actually quite a few mentions of queer characters in this book. Would it have been better to have them more front and center in this story? Sure. But considering a number of characters are queer in a queer normative world in the author's latest epic fantasy series, I will forgive it here. We do learn that Tom is very chill with queer people in this book.
This book is still primarily told from Tom's first-person POV. But I think more so for this book than previous ones, we get a real sense that he's writing and telling this story after the fact. Because we have chapters from Kitty's second-person POV and it is a bit weird at first, but it did give me hope that she makes it out of her ordeal and is reunited with Tom.
Sam, Tom's ward (and basically younger brother at this point) is also in this book. I really love Sam even though he's still a whole teenage enigma. I would love to actually get books one day from Sam's POV. I think that would be so interesting, but, like as an adult. Because that would mean that Tom and Kitty can live peacefully and Sam can be the one getting into harrowing situations (if not causing them outright). But here, he is still a teenager who is a little weird but highly competent with sneaking about and using the weapons at his disposal because his father (captain of THE street gang in St. Giles) and his mother have trained him well.
Tom starts trying to find other avenues to make money for himself that isn't gambling. He's 26 and he really has no form of income. Kitty has her inheritance and she owns the bookshop. He...really doesn't have much to his name all things considered. I think it's interesting that he never once visits his father (ever) in these books nor sees his sister even though it's been mentioned that he wishes to see her after so many years. But in any case, Tom decides to open up a sort of private investigative business out of Moll's coffeehouse during the day. I thought this was something he was actually quite good at, and could continue doing. But all signs at the end of the book point to something slightly more stable and quiet for Tom's future.
Tom finds friends in unexpected people - Everett Felblade, an old man who owns an apothecary and a teacher of sorts to Sam (about poisons maybe). Felblade is such an odd character, but he's actually a good man and really came through and helped Tom a lot in this book. So, I like him.
Then, there's Jeremiah. We really meet him and hear his story about halfway through the book. It is dark. His story is told in his POV in the chapter labeled only "The History" and it made me cry. In short, he was born on a slave ship and grew up working on a plantation in Antigua. This chapter is ROUGH reading because it tells of his heartbreak and having everything and everyone he loved slowly and cruely taken away from under him. Jeremiah was a dreamer and had a wild imagination, but life is heartbreaking and I hate seeing him lose so much.
I thought his POV was done without seeming too gratuitous, but I will say it is extremely jarring to go from Jeremiah's POV back to Tom's at the end of his recounting. Because at the end of the day, Tom is a privileged white man (poor and heartsick as he is) and now it's making me side-eye some of the stuff he's said to Jeremiah because it seems so ignorant and thoughtless. Things worked out for them and they were on much better terms at the end of the book, but it takes awhile to get there.
Honestly, I thought the author was going to skip over the whole topic of slavery in 1720s England and their role in it because while the South Sea scandal was talked about at length in the previous book, what their business the company was involved with wasn't talked about (which, of course, was slaves). But this book really brought it all to the forefront.
Jospeh Kloska does really well narrating this audiobook. This might be his best work in this series. I enjoyed his narration, even though I realized listening to this book I have assumed the wrong pronunciation of the country of Antigua my entire life (apparently the 'u' is silent). He does read through the author's Historical Note at the end of this book, so that is in the audiobook. I don't know wha the deciding factors are to whether or not they're included into an audiobook (maybe they're not ready where the narrator starts recording the audiobook) but I am grateful we get it here.
There's also a new pet dog named Gonzalo, which Tom reluctantly adopted because the dog won't leave him alone, but nothing bad happens to him. I'm only assuming Tom and Kitty go and pick up the dog afterwards and they all live happily ever after. I do wish we could have seen Kitty's reaction to getting a dog.
Tom and Kitty do spend many months apart in this book, but not because they had a falling out or because they've fallen out of love. They are more in love than ever. But Kitty gets kidnapped and Tom spends many, many months trying to find her (even almost dying in the process). They are so in love and it pained me to see them hurting. Kitty is such a fierce character, and it hurts my heart that she was suffering for months and months. She even escaped at one point! Like I said earlier, we do get chapters from her POV written in Tom in the second-person and those are also rough to read because I thought surely that meant they would be reunited earlier. But NO.
The ending is a happy one because Tom and Kitty are together and we do get closure on the villain of this story. In the epilogue, Sam takes care of business and I thank him for that. My heart feels lighter knowing that person will never bother anyone ever again.
One thing I love about Tom and Kitty is that they get their happy ending even without getting legally married. They're in love and they know it and that's all that matters. Not that I've read a lot of historical romance books but I don't think I've read a m/f romance that doesn't end in marriage. So, it was actually refreshing to see Tom and Kitty to remain as true to who they are at the start of the series at the end too.