Book Review – The Small Museum by Jody Cooksley @AllisonandBusby

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Small Museum by Jody Cooksley. My thanks to Helen at Helen Richardson PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Allison & Busby for my review copy via NetGalley. Do check out the posts by my tour buddies today, Clare at The Fallen Librarian, and Sara at Intensive Gassing About Books.


About the Book

Book cover of The Small Museum by Jody Cooksley

London, 1873. Madeleine Brewster’s marriage to Dr Lucius Everley was meant to be the solution to her family’s sullied reputation. After all, Lucius is a well-respected collector of natural curiosities, his ‘Small Museum’ of bones and things in jars is his pride and joy, although kept under lock and key. His sister Grace’s philanthropic work with fallen women is also highly laudable. However, Maddie is confused by and excluded from what happens in what is meant to be her new home.

Maddie’s skill at drawing promises a role for her though when Lucius agrees to let her help him in making a breakthrough in evolutionary science, a discovery of the first ‘fish with feet’. But the more Maddie learns about both Lucius and Grace, the more she suspects that unimaginable horrors lie behind their polished reputations. Framed for a crime that would take her to the gallows and leave the Everleys unencumbered, Maddie’s only hope is her friend Caroline Fairly. But will she be able to put the pieces together before the trial reaches its fatal conclusion?

Format: Hardcover (320 pages) Publisher: Allison & Busby
Publication date: 16th May 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

The author has created a ‘small museum’ of her own, in this case a literary one, by bringing together all the elements you could wish for in a Victorian age historical mystery. In particular, it incorporates the macabre interest in the collection and display of anatomical curiosities as well as more outlandish theories about the evolution of species circulating at the time.

Poor Maddie, married off to Lucius in order to try to restore her family’s social standing following the ‘disgrace of her sister Rebecca, is pretty much a lamb to the slaughter. She cannot understand Lucius’ coldness towards her nor the fact that she is kept pretty much a prisoner in her new home which is run with ruthless efficiency by housekeeper, Mrs Barker. Lucius is invariably absent, either visiting patients or attending scientific meetings, so Maddie’s is a lonely existence, made worse by unsettling little things, such as the unexplained rearrangement of objects or the strange sounds she hears in the night. Could it be her imagination? Everyone seems anxious to convince her it is. Have a cup of cocoa and an early night, dear…

Maddie makes touching attempts to show interest in Lucius’s work in the hope of gaining his attention but it’s only when her artistic skill seems likely to assist his work that she gains a modicum of value in his eyes. Unfortunately, it will be a long time until she discovers what her real value to him is, and when she – and the reader – does, it’s positively shocking. Maddie badly needs a friend and Caroline Fairly proves a particularly steadfast one, along with Maddie’s maid, Tizzy, who risks her own wellbeing if she is discovered.

The book has a generous role call of villains. I’d single out Lucius’s sister, Grace, whose knack for gliding into rooms unexpectedly reminded me of Mrs Danvers in Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca. She willingly goes along with the gaslighting of Maddie whilst at the same time cultivating an air of philanthropy through her involvement in a home for fallen women (reminiscent of the establishment in Stacey Halls’s The Household). Then there are the Barkers, the Eversleys’ loyal retainers, a persistent malign prescence and whom, one suspects, know all the family’s dirty secrets. And, of course, there’s Lucius himself who for a long time seems to be just a coldly obsessive man determined to prove a theory he has developed. But what lengths will he go to in pursuit of that proof?

I particularly liked the use of chapter headings that describe some of the often quite macabre ‘curiosities’ in Lucius’s collection and the way the author subtly insinuated some of these into the story. I was fascinated to learn that some were inspired by actual exhibits in the Hunterian Museum in London.

The Small Museum is a chilling and immersive historical mystery generously infused with elements of Gothic fiction.

In three words: Creepy, dramatic, atmospheric
Try something similar: Things in Jars by Jess Kidd


About the Author

Author Jody Cooksley
Photo credit: Lillian Spibey

Jody Cooksley studied literature at Oxford Brookes University and has a Masters in Victorian Poetry. Her debut novel The Glass House was a fictional account of the life of nineteenth-century photographer, Julia Margaret Cameron. The Small Museum, Jody’s third novel, won the 2023 Caledonia Novel Award.

Jody is originally from Norwich and now lives in Cranleigh, Surrey.

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Book Review – Absolutely & Forever by Rose Tremain

About the Book

Book cover of Absolutely & Forever by Rose Tremain

Marianne Clifford, 15, only child of a peppery army colonel and his vain wife, Lal, falls helplessly and absolutely for Simon Hurst, 18, whose cleverness and physical beauty suggest that he will go forward into a successful and monied future, helped on by doting parents. But fate intervenes. Simon’s plans are blown off course, and Marianne is forced to bury her dreams of a future together.

Narrating her own story, characterising herself as ignorant and unworthy, Marianne’s telling use of irony and smart thinking gradually suggest to us that she has underestimated her own worth. We begin to believe that―in the end, supported by her courageous Scottish friend, Petronella―she will find the life she never stops craving. But what we can’t envisage is that beneath his blithe exterior, Simon Hurst has been nursing a secret which will alter everything.

Format: Hardback (192 pages) Publisher: Chatto & Windus
Publication date: 21st September 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Absolutely & Forever is one of the six books on the shortlist for the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2024. (You can find a list of all the shortlisted books here along with information about previous shortlisted books and prize winners.)

I have read several of Rose Tremain’s previous books, including The Colour, The Gustav Sonata (shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize in 2017) and more recently Lily. I really enjoyed Lily but, although I loved the first two thirds of The Gustav Sonata, it wasn’t my favourite of that year’s shortlisted books. Unfortunately I feel pretty much the same way about Absolutely & Forever; for me, there are better, far more enjoyable, books on the list.

Absolutely & Forever is described as ‘a piercing short novel of thwarted love and true friendship’ which is right on all three counts. It is a relatively short novel – less than 200 pages – and Marianne’s friendship with Petronella is an engaging element of the book. And it certainly is a story about thwarted love, at least on the part of Marianne who, at the age of fifteen, falls passionately in love with Simon, a boy a few years her senior. It’s an obsession that lasts a lifetime despite mounting evidence that Simon does not feel the same way about her, or at least not sufficiently to overcome the difficulties that stand in the way of a relationship with her.

What does unite them is that, although supposedly the start of the ‘swinging 60s’, they both find themselves in a position where social pressures demand they take a conventional path in life: marriage and family. Marianne’s life is marked by tragedy but also by bad choices. However her eventual realisation that the life she has imagined for herself for so long will never be realised, and that along the way she has missed out on many things, is heartbreaking. I felt sorry for Marianne but it was the devoted Hugo who really captured my heart.

I think my main problem with the book was that I never really understood why Simon should dominate Marianne’s thoughts to such an extent and have such an influence on her life choices. Okay, he is her first love and the person with whom she first explores her sexuality but it’s Marianne who does all the running once he goes off to Oxford and then to Paris. I think Marianne herself sums up my reservations when, responding to a critique of the book she’s writing, she says, ‘If you don’t describe the lost thing to the readers, it’s impossible for them to care about it one way or another’. In this case, I knew what the lost thing was it’s just that the loss of it didn’t break my heart.

Although beautifully written, Absolutely & Forever didn’t enthrall me like it clearly has other readers. This makes it almost certain to win the prize!

In three words: Insightful, emotional, assured
Try something similar: Bonjour, Sophie by Elizabeth Buchan


About the Author

Author Rose Tremain

Rose Tremain’s novels and short stories have been published in thirty countries and have won many awards, including the Orange Prize (The Road Home), the Dylan Thomas Prize (The Colonel’s Daughter and Other Stories), the Whitbread Novel of the Year (Music and Silence), the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Prix Femina in France (Sacred Country), and the South Bank Sky Arts Award (The Gustav Sonata). Her most recent novel is Lily, a Richard and Judy Book Club selection. Rose Tremain was made a CBE in 2007 and a Dame in 2020. She lives in Norfolk and London with the biographer Richard Holmes.

Connect with Rose
Website | Goodreads