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The Nature of Monsters

by Clare Clark

The Nature of Monsters Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

1666: The Great Fire of London sweeps through the streets and a heavily pregnant woman flees the flames. A few months later she gives birth to a child disfigured by a red birthmark.

1718: Sixteen-year-old Eliza Tally sees the gleaming dome of St. Paul's Cathedral rising above a rebuilt city. She arrives as an apothecary's maid, a position hastily arranged to shield the father of her unborn child from scandal. But why is the apothecary so eager to welcome her when he already has a maid, a half-wit named Mary? Why is Eliza never allowed to look her veiled master in the face or go into the study where he pursues his experiments? It is only on her visits to the Huguenot bookseller who supplies her master's scientific tomes that she realizes the nature of his obsession. And she knows she has to act to save not just the child but Mary and herself.

With exquisite prose, dark humor, and a historian's eye for detail, Clare Clark has created another transporting novel.

Review:

"British author Clark's second novel, a moving historical set in early 18th-century London, surpasses her acclaimed debut, The Great Stink (2005). When teenager Eliza Tally gets pregnant, her mother sells her into servitude to an apothecary, Grayson Black. Eliza struggles to survive in a bizarre household, unaware that her new master is interested in the effects of various emotions on her unborn child. Isolated save for a kindly, slow-witted fellow servant, Mary, Eliza develops an unlikely relationship with a French bookseller, Mr. Honfleur, who supplies Black with the scientific treatises he uses to inform his sadistic researches. Eliza hopes Honfleur will provide her with the means for escape. Unlike The Great Stink, this suspenseful tale contains no whodunit element, but as in her previous book, Clark's empathetic portrait of the powerless and the victimized will remind many readers of Dickens. Author tour. (May)" Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Review:

"Early in Clare Clark's new novel (following the well-received 'The Great Stink'), you could be forgiven for thinking you had picked up a bit of historical erotica. The first few pages are a deluge of longing, hot rushes, feverish skin, swollen mouths and slick muskiness. Eliza Tally, a poor village girl in rural early-18th-century England, has it bad for a dandy from a well-off family. Clark gives... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review)

Review:

"As she did so successfully in The Great Stink, Clark again transports readers to another time and place in this mesmerizing tale of life in the mean streets of 18th-century London." Library Journal

Review:

"Readers who are not put off by the graphically documented grotesqueries and perversions will be drawn into the spellbinding gothic netherworld Clark spins." Booklsit

Review:

"Clark has talent and energy to burn. But she's burning both up in wasteful displays of gratuitous pyrotechnics." Kirkus Reviews

Synopsis:

Following her successful debut of "The Great Stink"--a "New York Times" Editors' Choice selection--Clark has created another transporting novel with exquisite prose, dark humor, and a historian's eye for detail.

About the Author

Clare Clark's first novel, The Great Stink, was a New York Times Editors' Choice, a Washington Post Best Book of the Year, and the winner of the Quality Paperback Book Club New Voices Award. She lives in London.

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:
Jena, October 24, 2007 (view all comments by Jena)
This is a very well researched book, so if you're interested in life in the 18th century, this book describes the life (though not typical) of a maidservant, medical theories, and opium addiction. However, I can think of historical fictions with better plots and characters; the plot here hinges on bizarre research of the master of the house and the characters prove inconsistent. At the end, I felt that the author was in a hurry to be done with the book.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9780151012060
Author:
Clark, Clare
Publisher:
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH)
Subject:
Historical
Subject:
Historical - General
Subject:
Pregnant women
Subject:
Women domestics
Subject:
Women's Studies
Subject:
Historical fiction
Subject:
Mystery fiction
Copyright:
Publication Date:
May 2007
Binding:
Hardcover
Language:
English
Pages:
382
Dimensions:
9.12x6.58x1.28 in. 1.51 lbs.

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