I was new to Clare Boylan's writing, although she is well known and respected in Ireland. When I heard of the concept, taking the first two chapters of an unfinished novel by Charlotte Bronte and completing it, I was intrigued and couldn't wait for the paperback version to come out.
The main part written by Boylan is intelligent, well researched and brighter in tone than the first two chapters by Bronte. I find Bronte's work sometimes bleak and depressing, and although there are very sad and shocking images of the lives of the destitute in Victorian London imparted by Boylan, I felt she only added them to make a point and they did not really capture the mood unlike in Sarah Walter's "Fingersmith". As the story unfolded, you always had the sense that everything would work out fine in the end.
At times, I was also reminded of Wilkie Collin's "The Lady in White". The characters are well rounded but could do with being slightly less predictable in their reactions to events in the novel. Perhaps it's a bit unfair of me to say so, but they could have walked off an Oscar Wilde stage, so two-dimensional were they at times.
All in all, a good, recommendable novel, but one which could do bit a bit more of Charlotte Bronte's grit.