![]() ![]() This is an accurate pastiche of Victorian fiction, with all the attendant positives and negatives. ![]() The female characters, particularly Albie’s wife, get short shrift in the story, and the plot is predictable for anyone familiar with works of the era. Albie’s actions doom him at the right moments indeed, there’s no suspense at all to his character arc, which is straight out of Poe, right down to the uncomfortable romance. Littlewood carefully refrains from revealing whether the fairies are real or mere myth. When Lizzie is murdered by her husband in a small town with deep-rooted superstitions about fairies, Albie investigates and ends up calling his entire life into question in a mystery that’s pleasant but predictable. Albie Mirrals has a passing fancy for his young, poorly situated cousin Lizzie, but he ends up in a happy marriage with a fellow member of the upper classes. ![]() ![]() There’s an amazing sense of place and time in this novel, as Littlewood ( Zombie Apocalypse! Acapulcalypse Now!) perfectly captures the literary style, attitudes, and class consciousness of Victorian England. ![]()
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