Featherweight by Mick Kitson is a fascinating work of historical fiction, loosely inspired by the author's own family history. Initially drawn in by the beautiful cover, the description of the story completely sold me on the book. Although I have read quite a bit of historical fiction, I have never come across a story like this one, There are fist fights and first loves, highway men and depraved Lords , all wrapped up in the wonderfully told story of our narrator, Annie Perry.
As a young child, Annie is sold by her Romani family, who can no longer afford to feed her, and becomes the adoptive daughter of one of the greatest prize fighters of the time, Bill Perry, the Tipton Slasher. When the time comes for him to give up fighting the pair settle down and buy an alehouse. While Annie is happy in her life with Bill, she still faces regular abuse because of her Romani heritage, and when she is brutally attacked one evening she decides that she will have to learn how to defend herself. The fighting skills she learns are put to the test when she is forced into a boxing ring, not only to protect her beloved Bill, but to try to earn some money to save the floundering alehouse , their home. Soon she finds herself part of a touring boxing booth, taking on all comers as the daughter of the Tipton Slasher, and a new way of life is born. However things can never run smoothly for too long and soon Annie finds herself in the most dangerous situation of her life, and it is one where even her fists will not be able to save her.
I was totally fascinated by this book which gave me a glimpse of a facet of history I knew nothing about. The author does not shy away from the brutality of the ring, and though the book is not a gore fest, there are numerous descriptions of brutal injuries which some readers might find upsetting. At first I was not sure about the author's decision to use the first person for all of Annie's chapters , especially in the early part of the book, where it is a child's perspective, but over the course of the book as a whole, as she grew up and got an education, it became less of a distraction. Some people might find the pace a little slow, but I didn't mind it, I was enjoying getting to know the characters so much that it was not an issue. I also appreciated how the author was able to give a real sense of the huge social changes that were happening during the period the book was set in, with increased industrialisation and the resultant social unrest being woven into the narrative effortlessly. Annie is also a fantastic character to hang a story on, she is determined, fiercely independent and determined to succeed on her own merits despite the many setbacks she faces along the way.
I read and reviewed an ARC courtesy of NetGalley and the publisher, all opinions are my own.