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Fingersmith
 
 

Fingersmith [Kindle Edition]

Sarah Waters
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (117 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Fingersmith is the third slice of engrossing lesbian Victoriana from Sarah Waters. Although lighter and more melodramatic in tone than its predecessor Affinity, this hypnotic suspense novel is awash with all manner of gloomy Dickensian leitmotifs: pickpockets; orphans; grim prisons; lunatic asylums; "laughing villains" and, of course, "stolen fortunes and girls made out to be mad". Oliver Twist (which is mentioned on the opening page), The Woman in White and The Prince and the Pauper all exert an influence on it but none overawe. Like Peter Ackroyd, Waters has an uncanny gift for inventive reconstruction.

Divided into three parts, the tale is narrated by two orphaned girls whose lives are inextricably linked. It begins in a grimy thieves kitchen in Borough, South London with 17-year-old orphan Susan Trinder. She has been raised by Mrs Sucksby, a cockney Ma Baker, in a household of fingersmiths (pickpockets), coiners and burglars. One evening Richard "Gentleman" Rivers, a handsome confidence man, arrives. He has an elaborate scheme to defraud Maud Lilly, a wealthy heiress. If Sue will help him she'll get a share of the "shine". Duly installed in the Lillys' country house as Maud's maid, Sue finds that her mistress is virtually a prisoner. Maud's eccentric Uncle Christopher, an obsessive collector of erotica (loosely modelled on Henry Spenser Ashbee) controls every aspect of her life. Slowly a curious intimacy develops between the two girls and as Gentleman's plans take shape, Sue begins to have doubts. The scheme is finally hatched but as Maud commences her narrative it suddenly becomes more than a tad difficult to tell quite who has double-crossed who. Waters' penchant for Byzantine plotting can get a bit exhausting but even at its densest moments--and remember this is smoggy London circa 1862--it remains mesmerising. A damning critique of Victorian moral and sexual hypocrisy, a gripping melodrama and a love story to boot, this book ingeniously reworks some truly classic themes.--Travis Elborough

Review

'A chilling, ingenious erotic thriller - unputdownable' Sunday Express 'She distils a slice of London Victoriana, involving pickpockets, orphans and identity, into a fantastic plot and handles the story so well that you just can't wait to get to the end.' Tracy Chevalier,author of The Girl with a Pearl Earring 'Sarah Waters is one of the best storytellers alive today' Matt Thorne, Independent on Sunday.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 780 KB
  • Print Length: 560 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1573229725
  • Publisher: Hachette Digital (3 Feb 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B004JHY80I
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (117 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #3,693 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Sarah Waters
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
88 of 91 people found the following review helpful
Review 1 Nov 2001
By Keris Nine TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
It is 1862. Sue is an orphan, her mother hanged for murder, who has been brought up by Mrs Sucksby and her little gang of thieves - she's a "fingersmith", a pickpocket. One of the gang, "Gentleman", has a plan to marry a lady, Maud Lilly - the niece of a man he is binding prints for, who is the heiress to a great fortune. Sue is employed as a maid to Maud Lilly, to help Gentleman elope with her, and, when the time comes, leave her in a madhouse and take her inheritance. For this Sue is promised £2,000.
But that's only the very beginning of the book - there are many ups and downs and twists to the plot as the novel progresses.

I hadn't read anything by Sarah Waters before, so some aspects of this book came as a bit of a surprise to me. The novel starts off like a cross between Oliver Twist and Jane Eyre, so sudden outbursts of strong language come as a bit of a shock. With the appearance of a tasteful lesbian episode, graphic depictions of grim Victorian asylums, libraries and dark little shops dealing with collections of erotica it becomes less Dickensian and more like the movie "Quills". The descriptions of Victorian London are excellent. There is a real feeling for the dark, narrow, filthy streets of London of the period and of the fetid swill of the Thames. Dealing in the milieu of seedy bookshops and erotic literature, lends the book a further sleazy aspect.

If the plot's dramatic twists and developments are a little unconvincing, it is the author's assurance in the handling of the characters that carries it off and makes you want to believe them. Even if the character-types are a little stereotypical and Dickensian, the characters themselves are well-developed. No-one is an out and out villain - each character has their own personal motivations and these change as circumstances change. We see characters differently as the novel progresses and feel a certain sympathy for each of them in their predicaments.

It's not exactly a conventional plot, or a romantic period bodice-ripper as might have been expected - or rather it is quite conventional, but it's just the twist that the female protagonist couldn't care less about the handsome rougue of a male suitor but is attracted to her maid instead, that makes "Fingersmith" a little bit different. From the reviews I have read of her other books, this will no doubt please fans of Sarah Waters. It is well-written, an enjoyable Victorian adventure, a page-turner with a ludicrously convoluted and, frankly, unbelievable plot that twists and turns just when you think you know where it's going and keeps you hanging in there for the resolution to the terrible predicaments that both main characters find themselves in. A good and very enjoyable read.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Made me gasp 7 Feb 2005
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
I was loaned this by a friend (who hadn't yet read it but I was after something to read for my hols.) I picked it up just before I went away. I knew nothing of the writer or what to expect from it. I ended up finishing it before I went !!! I couldn't put it down, it drew me into it's pages and made me gasp at bits and I just had to read on to see what would happen. I never saw any of it coming. I never found it tedious or drawn out as some have commented I enjoyed all of it and hated it when I'd finished it !!! I've now given it back to my friend with a YOU MUST READ THIS !!! I shall certainly consider another of this authors books !!!
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38 of 40 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Sarah Waters' third novel begins simply enough. Sue Trinder is a teenage orphan who lives amongst a group of confidence men, thieves, baby farmers and fingersmiths (a 19th-century term for a pickpockets). An unscrupulous man commonly and ironically known as Gentleman compels Sue to join in his plot to win the heart of an elderly bookish man's niece named Maud. Maud is heiress to a fortune, but she can only claim it if she marries. The plan is: win the lady, ditch the wife in an insane asylum and split the fortune. Sue becomes Maud's maid and when the plot is reaching its timely conclusion is the exact point where it is fractured and split like a forest path into numerous twisting paths revealing long held secrets and hidden strife. Sue and Maud are made to endure separate trials in their journey including the incarceration in a mad house, the subjection of reading and transcribing appalling pornography to a perverted old man and a dangerous journey through treacherous London in search of a friend in order for them to discover what their true pasts consist of and what predestined traits may tweak their futures.

It is fitting that at the beginning of this novel a reference is made to Dickens' Oliver Twist. Fingersmith is a novel descended from Dickens voluminous library as well as much 19th century sensualist fiction. Waters skilled use of language to evoke characters and a sense of place through physical detail and psychological mapping of experience is a distinct characteristic of this descent. She also has a tremendous ability to use fabulous names such as (Mrs Sucksby and Miss Bacon) as Dickens did to mark poignant traits of her characters. Where Waters veers from Dickens is in her conjuring of robust female characters who can dominate the novel, not through the circumstances of their plight and their representation of certain social injustice, but through the powerful voice they use to assert their individual positions. Of course the great descriptions and plotting Waters uses to conjure this tale of a 19th century English plot to capture a family fortune makes a great many statements about the ways in which women were marginalised and the bizarre social positions they were forced to inhabit. However, the great strength of her brilliant protagonists Sue and Maud is in the way their actions are guided more by their impulsive desire to survive rather than to spur the trim, thrilling plot or subscribe to any societal roles presented to them. Their struggles led by these natures produces a longing for a happy resolution built not out of sentimentally contrived conventions, but a deserved reward for revealing to us their faulty human natures.

Sue and Maud are not angels. They both deceive and betray each other, but they discover in this Darwinian world a rare affection for each other and a chance to share confidence when one's closest family is apt to betray you. The curious mirroring effect Waters uses with them, mixing pasts and characteristics of them, is descended from a more recent literary genius, Angela Carter. There are elements of her ideas (particularly realised in her novel Wise Children) on the way identity can be splintered, performed and reimagined which correspond to the ways Susan and Maud's fates are intertwined. Their relationship is drawn out as a struggle to express their mutual love and define their suppressed lesbian desires. But this is also presented as an arduous task to realise the aspects which make them powerful individuals. This novel makes the remote past enticingly familiar and relates a harrowing story that makes you wish it to continue on and on.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Full of surprises
There's twist after twist to this plot until, by the end, nobody is what they first seemed. I loved the intricacy of the story and the way the characters are portrayed with... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mulberry
I envy you that have yet to read this....
I have just had a quick cursory look at all of my reviews on this site - and most of them are five out of five stars.

Perhaps it is because I know what I like. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Annie
Bleakly depressing
In Victorian England, two ostensible orphans, one brought up as a lady, the other amongst London thieves, find that their lives are inter-woven. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Varifocal
Pleasantly Surprised
I bought this book rather warily - I am not a lover of classics, or of books set in the Victorian period (I find them terribly boring), but it was identified as lesbian literature. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Mama P
Probably the most compelling book I've read, ever
I was lucky to be handed this book around a year ago when it was selected for World Book Night 2011, a celebration of great writing where 25 titles are handed out free to readers,... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Kindledays
Terrific
Great suspense from Sarah Waters. It is well-written, with smart, insightful and often funny dialog. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Shunzi
a real page turner ... from a sci-fi nut !
At 57 years old, having read science Fiction all of my life, I decided to use my new Kindle to broaden my reading. Read more
Published 5 months ago by I. J. Sloan
Double crossing... (POSSIBLE SPOILERS)
This was my choice for my book group. I chose it because I'd considered reading it many times and thought it would have enough discussion. Read more
Published 5 months ago by C. Rucroft
Entertaining stuff
This is a very plot driven book with lots of cliff-hangers, parts are sometimes told by different points of view and nothing is quite what it seems. Read more
Published 6 months ago by J. Willis
Captivating and fun
If you enjoy historical fiction with a good dose of intrigue and cunning and you are looking for a good book to curl up with during the darknes of winter nights, then I suggest... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Alison McVey
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That is all he says. But in his face I see, at last, how much I want her. &quote;
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Only now I saw, she was not stroking the flesh so much as rubbing at it. She was not nursing the kiss. She felt his mouth like a burn, like an itch, like a splinter, and was trying to rub the memory of it away. She didnt love him at all. She was afraid of him. &quote;
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