Laura Shepherd-Robinson's debut is an impressively researched piece of 18th century historical fiction that proves to be an atmospheric, viscerally gut wrenching depiction of the realities and horrors of the slave trade within Britain, London and the wider British Empire. This is not for the faint hearted as its brutal portrayal spares the reader none of the heinous details of the era, providing an indelible and heartbreaking stain of unforgettable shame on British history. It took me a little while to get into this novel, but once I did, I was fiercely glued, turning the pages ever faster, until I had finished. It is London 1781, Captain Harry Corsham has returned a hero from war in the US, suffering PTSD. His marriage to Caro, from a powerful and wealthy banking family, is experiencing difficulties, and he has a young son, Gabriel, whom he adores. He is on the cusp of becoming an elected parliamentarian, buttressed by establishment support, especially his employer. He receives a visit from Amelia, the sister of lawyer Thaddeus 'Tad' Archer, a friend from his Oxford days who meant everything to him until their friendship splintered apart for some reason. Amelia, who ran off with a married man, is a pariah, shunned by London society.
Amelia is a distraught and worried woman, Tad, a totally committed abolitionist, is missing in Deptford, a slaving port, having informed his sister that he was about to expose a secret that would bring down the slave trade, but he was being followed, threatened, and in danger of being killed. A powerful establishment group, including those in government, slave traders and the West India Company are determined to ensure the profitable slave trade continues unabated, willing to do whatever it takes to squash any meaningful opposition. In the midst of the river's miasmic Devil's Breath at Deptford dock, a man's body hangs on a hook, gruesomely tortured as slaves are, branded with a slaver's mark. Harry goes in search of his friend in the mean streets of Deptford, guilt ridden, walking in Tad's footsteps to find out what happened to him. His efforts to investigate are not welcomed, and before long he too finds himself in the same dangers that befell his dear friend. Despite all the obstacles, he is driven by an inner need to atone, not even the prospect of losing everything that matters, including his glittering future, nothing can stop him, not even the fear of his own death.
The author captures the murky poverty stricken streets of London, the cruel horrors of its underbelly of crime, abuse and the dehumanising business of slavetrading, and those at the sharp end of it. The massacre that took place in 1778 on the appropriately named ship, The Dark Angel, is fictitious, but this nightmarish practice really did occur at this time on slave transport ships heading towards the sugar plantations across the Atlantic. So many of the characters that Harry meets in Deptford or London turn out to be not what they seem, with an unholy tangle of twisted intrigue, politics, and slavetraders, the narrative slowly reveals deception, massacre, conspiracy to defraud, murders, entrenched racism, greed, and the mental health issues that plagued those that had been enslaved. Harry's characterisation had depth and is complex, the true nature of his love for and relationship with Tad is poignant and emotionally affecting, whilst societies harsh attitudes to such relationships is a reflection of the historical period. The British slave trade continued until 1807, although this made little inroads into slavery and it was only outlawed in the British Empire in 1833. I found this atmospheric novel an enthralling read, outlining what abolitionists faced when it came to instigating change and shifting perceptions of the people. This is a fantastic debut. Many thanks to PanMacmillan for an ARC.