It is also, of course, utterly exquisite, whether in concept, in character, in prose, in everything. This is an utter believable, realistic 1899, whether in London, in a St Ptersburg circus, in a Siberian winter made very real. There is philosophy, there is a humane feminism which, as feminism usually tends to be, is extraordinary kind and unforgiving to those of us, the weaker sex, with y chromosomes.
The magic does not overshadow the realism, but it is there. There is metaphor, of course: Fevvers, the aerialist whose story we follow (although generally through the eyes of Walse; her interiority remains a mystery) was born, with wings, yet she was also born into a society where women are unable to spread their wings- metaporically or, in Fevvers' case, also metaphorically. A bird in a gilded cagre, indeed. Yet the circus is a magical place too, on more levels than the literal.
This is a novel of tragedy, hope, unexpected redemption, tigers, and more, but ultimately of love and unexpected happiness. It's bonkers, it's brilliant,it's gleefully erudite, it's full of heart.
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