I recently reviewed a novel that focused on the class system in late Victorian England where the protagonists were essentially all males. This novel looks at the class system around Napoleonic times, and particularly as it applied to the lower classes, through the eyes of female protagonists. Jemima Brigges paints a depressing picture, but she paints it well. By the time they were approaching 10 years old, and assuming they were in the lower classes, girls were pressed into service. They worked exhausting hours, and were in constant danger of being raped, and if they were, it was seemingly their fault. The story follows Maria, who became pregnant through rape, had a daughter, but because she then had a three week fever, the daughter was left at a church as a foundling. The story also follows the daughter, Nell. Nell is brought up with a woman who is seemingly always pregnant, but, due to malnutrition, the children seldom survive, and a drunken father. She is then put into service at the local rectory, under the eyes of a parson who is a drunken sadistic paedophile, and his sadistic sister. Maria has adopted the identity of Miss Dinchope, and she is housekeeper there, and is of slightly higher status than most, other than the parson and his sister. These latter two are equally somewhat subservient to the local squire. Not a lot happens in the story, but the sequence of relatively trivial events of "women's interests" is so well written that the story maintained my interest throughout. The story ends in one sense, but leaves many questions, so my guess is there will be a sequel. Top class writing.