cover image The Book of Fires

The Book of Fires

Jane Borodale, . . Viking/Pamela Dorman, $26.95 (356pp) ISBN 978-0-670-02106-2

Borodale’s enjoyable debut is the story of Agnes Trussel, who, in 1752, leaves the poverty-stricken countryside for London, intent on hiding her unwanted pregnancy and making a better life. On her journey, she meets Lettice Talbot, a beautiful young woman who promises to help her, but when Agnes loses track of her benefactress, she ends up as the apprentice to Mr. Blacklock, a moody pyrotechnist who is mourning his dead wife as he attempts to bring color to fireworks. Despite her difficulties with Blacklock’s other domestic staff, Agnes grows to feel at home in London and enjoys her work, but she is constantly threatened by the imminent exposure of her pregnancy and haunted by the guilt of her theft of the stash of coins that funded her trip. This menacing mood is Borodale’s greatest achievement: from the omnipresent hangings to the economic knife-edge upon which the working class lives, she builds a dark but human world that makes Agnes’s plight deeply sympathetic. When the story is neatly tied up with an unexpected resolution to Agnes’s problems, it’s surprising but not unbelievable, capping off a delightfully diverting book. (Jan.)