ACTUAL RATING 3.5 STARS
The Séance was a nice little gothic story will all the usual tropes of the genre; a haunted house, a haunted heroine, and a mystery. While I did find the second act much too long, and the ending of the story had a few holes in it, it was a mostly enjoyable tale that did hold a lot of tragedy, a dash of suspense, and just a tinge of death.
The story is initially told from the narrative of Constance Langton and her unhappy adolescent years caring for her mother as she grieves her youngest child. After her suicide, and feeling that she doesn’t have anything left, Constance finds she is the last remaining female relative of the current owner of Wraxford Hall, and she is due to inherit the hall and the Monks Woods surrounding it. The lawyer for the estate, John Montague, comes to find Constance and to tell her about the troubled history surrounding the Hall, and begs her to destroy the home once and for all.
Sell the hall unseen; burn it to the ground and plough the earth with salt, if you will; but never live there.
We then switch to John Montague’s narrative, and then we hear from Eleanor Unwin, who later becomes Nell Wraxford. Their narrative tells the tale of Cornelius Wraxford’s disappearance, and his nephew Magus taking over the Hall, and then his disappearance, along with Nell (his wife) and their daughter. This is where it all becomes quite confusing, with Nell framed for the murder of Magnus, as well as her child, but Constance believes that neither are really dead, and that she herself is the daughter of Nell Wraxford. There is a lot of attempting framing, diversions, and lies, and it all seems overly complicated at times. I was surprised at the ending, but then I was left to wonder what it was all for really. I mean, Nell did escape from a horribly emotionally abusive relationship, but why did Magnus fake his own death, and what did he really believe came of Nell? The final confrontation at Wraxford Hall did feel a bit contrived towards the end.
Eleanor, or Nell, was the perfect Gothic heroine. Since I just studied the Female Gothic, there were a lot of patters I could see, specially her seeing marriage as a way out of her dire situation, and how she was trapped inside her home with the baby all the time who people felt she was building an unhappy attachment too. There was also her fear of being put in an asylum, by her mother or her husband, and trying to determine whether she herself is seeing things or if she does have some kind of ability. The supernatural element was more subdued that I would have liked to see, but in the end it served Nell’s rouse about her disappearance. But still, it left a lot unanswered about this side of the story.
The novel was well written and had some very thorough characterisation, but the mystery itself was a tad convoluted, and the ending wasn’t the climax I was hoping for.