written by Janet Lewison on 03/08/2009
'But Briar crept on me. Briar absorbed me. Now I feel the simple weight of the woollen cloak with which I have covered myself and think, I shall never escape! I am not meant to escape! Briar will never let me!'
Sarah Waters revisits Victorian Fiction's dark, fetid, spaces and lifts away the veils of repression. And everywhere we look in Fingersmith we notice ink. This is not the respectable ink of a dry, frigid Casaubon in George Eliot's library at Middlemarch, or of the exasperated Caddy Jellyby in Bleak House, besmirched by her mother's prodigious neglect. No, this is the ink that secretly contaminates. This is the ink of furtive deadly contracts inked years before; of erotic pictures inked in embossed seemingly respectable books; of ink smudging the troubled profile of a mistress besotted by her maid, her 'pearl'. And telling us all these things, we have Susan Trinder a pickpocket, a 'fingersmith' who can't read anything, to whom the world of ink remains dangerously alien, dangerously beyond her control.
If you enjoy being tantalised, and like being provoked, then you must read this book. The plot devices in Fingersmith are as labyrinthine as human nature and just as shattering- I dare you not to cry out loud at the very best twist in Contemporary Writing. I dare you not to be applauding a passion that has to overcome love's most barbaric enemy of them all - betrayal.
'Her dress was dark, and long, yet fell not quite to the floor. It was silk, but fastened at the front. The highest hook was left undone. I saw the beating of her throat behind it. I looked away.
Then I looked back, into her eyes.
'I only want you,' I said.
written by Kayleigh Leech Higginson on 29/04/2005
Sarah Waters, Fingersmith: I have become so caught up in this story it has inspired me to begin or should I say try to right the story that is in my head. If my book is 1/8 as good as this one I will be happy.
Kayleigh Leech - Higginson
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Hayley And Dave's Response to 191392_Kayleigh Leech Higginson's Review
Written on: 22/04/2006
I agree that this book really does stay in your head long after you have read it. Your mind tends to think of all the incredible twists and turns of the plot which slowly unravel themselves into one complex yet believable storyline.
I watched the BBC adaption after I had read the book, and it really does the book justice.