Book Review: Sugar Money by Jane Harris

WaltScott_Sugar MoneyAbout the Book

Martinique, 1765, and brothers, Emile and Lucien, are charged by their French master, Father Cléophas, with a mission. They must return to Grenada, the island they once called home, and smuggle back the 42 slaves claimed by English invaders at the hospital plantation in Fort Royal. While Lucien, barely in his teens, sees the trip as a great adventure, the older and worldlier Emile has no illusions about the dangers they will face. But with no choice other than to obey Cléophas – and sensing the possibility, however remote, of finding his first love Celeste – he sets out with his brother on this ‘reckless venture’.

Format: Hardcover, ebook (320 pp.)    Publisher: Faber & Faber
Published: 5th October 2017                  Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Sugar Money on Goodreads


My Review

There were a number of things that attracted me to Sugar Money.  Firstly, it’s one of the six books shortlisted for The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2018 – always an excellent hallmark for quality historical fiction – and I’m attempting to read all the shortlisted books before the winner is announced on 16th June.  (Eek, time running out and only 4 of the 6 read so far.)  Secondly, the book’s setting on the Caribbean islands of Martinique and Grenada.  I’ve been lucky enough to visit both those islands – admittedly only for a day as part of a cruise itinerary – but I remember loving Grenada, particularly the colourful market in the capital, St George’s, (referred to by its previous name Fort Royal in the book) with the smell of spices in the air.  In fact, I’m still using the nutmeg and mace I bought there.  Thirdly, I read Jane Harris’s first book, The Observations, some time ago but remember being captivated by its quirky narrator, Bessy.

Jane Harris repeats that feat in Sugar Money. The narrator, Lucien, engages the reader from the start with his distinctive mode of speech that is a mixture of English, Creole, French and his own individual way of describing people, places, events and his own feelings.  For example, after taking perhaps slightly too much rum: ‘Indeed, after several further swig, I came over all misty inside and considered myself to be quite invincible.’ I think many of us may have experienced the feeling of being ‘all misty inside’ after a touch too much to drink.  There’s some lovely humour as well.  During the voyage to Grenada in the rather dilapidated vessel owned by the strange Captain Bianco, Lucien observes a shooting star.  ‘Magical sight.  Perhaps it were a good omen.  For a brief instant, I allowed myself to feel encouraged.  But as the star died, trailing silver embers, old Bianco let flee a fart, startling as a blast of musketry, and the precious moment was ruined.’  I laughed out loud at that.

I also really liked the touching relationship between Lucien and Emile.  Lucien looks up to his older brother but at the same time he is an acute observer of his moods and innermost thoughts.  There might be a good deal of disputation and quarrelling but underneath there is loyalty and a real bond of love and affection. As he says, ‘I found myself too much in simple-hearted awe and adoration of my brother.’

In Sugar Money the author has taken what might be considered a footnote in Caribbean history and fashioned it into an adventure story crammed full of realistic detail.   The reader gets a detailed account of the preparations for the mission the two brothers have been given, including the process of convincing the slaves to take part and the discussion about how the escape will be managed.  I’ll confess there were times when I felt I was getting a little too much detail and the pace of the book slowed a bit but once the plan is under way the tension definitely builds again.

Behind the adventure story is a chilling depiction of the dreadful atrocities of slavery and the appalling life endured by the plantation slaves.  Worked to exhaustion, surviving on meagre food, subjected to the vilest and most cruel punishments, the women frequently the subject of sexual abuse, it is a life of misery and early death.   For the slaves of the hospital plantation in Grenada, what is on offer is the opportunity to escape the harsh conditions they are currently enduring in the hope of slightly less harsh conditions on Martinique.  The change of location does not offer them the prospect of freedom.  They will still be the possessions of someone else, put to work for the benefit of their owners with no say over their lives. In effect, they are being repossessed like objects.   Furthermore, there are dire consequences for the slaves should the plan be discovered.

Sugar Money is both a compelling adventure story and a powerful indictment of the cruelties of the slave trade.  I really did feel myself transported back to 18th century Grenada with its sights, sounds and smells conjured up brilliantly. In Lucien, the author has proved once again her remarkable ability to create a distinctive, original and engaging narrative voice.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Atmospheric, immersive, adventure

Try something similar…The Observations by Jane Harris


Jane Harris (Photo credit: James Lipman)About the Author

Jane was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and spent her early childhood there before her parents moved to Glasgow, Scotland, in 1965. She studied English Literature and Drama at the University of Glasgow then trained at East 15 Acting School in London.

She started writing by accident while living in Portugal in the early Nineties. She says, “I had no TV, hardly any books, no money. And so, just to amuse myself, I started writing a short story. It was about an ex-boyfriend who happened to be a transvestite. I had such a great time writing that story that I immediately wrote another one, about another ex-boyfriend; all my early stories were about ex-boyfriends. I kept writing these stories and they were getting published in anthologies and magazines. By this time, I had moved back to Scotland, having decided that I wanted to be a writer.”

She studied Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia, and then became writer-in-residence in Durham prison. It was there that she began her first novel, structured as a set of short stories. One of these short pieces was about a farmer-poet and a girl he acquires songs from. However, Harris says that as soon as she invented the voice of the girl, Bessy started taking over and she ended up ditching the farmer and focusing on Bessy and “Missus” – the woman who employs her as a maid.

The project ground to a halt at about 10,000 words when Harris started to write short scripts for her husband, film director Tom Shankland; two films, Going Down (2000) and Bait (1999), were nominated for Bafta awards. When she rediscovered her novel in a box in the attic in 2003 she says that she couldn’t believe she had abandoned Bessy. She sent the first 100 pages to publishers, and a bidding war took place between Faber, Fourth Estate and Hodder for UK rights. The Observations was published by Faber & Faber (UK) and Viking (USA) in hardcover in 2006.  It was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction 2007 and has been published in over 20 territories worldwide.  In the USA, The Observations won the Book of the Month Club’s First Fiction Prize and, in France, it was shortlisted for the Prix du Premier Roman Etranger.

In 2007 Jane was nominated for the British Book Awards Newcomer of the Year and for the Southbank Show/Times Breakthrough Award.  Her second novel, Gillespie and I, was shortlisted for Popular Fiction Book of the Year in the Galaxy National Book Awards in 2011.  Waterstones, the UK bookstore chain, selected Jane as one of its 25 Authors for the Future, and Richard and Judy chose The Observations as one of their 100 Books of the Decade.  Jane’s third novel, Sugar Money, was published by Faber and Faber in October 2017.

 

Connect with Jane

Website  ǀ  Facebook  ǀ  Twitter | Goodreads

Book Review: Prussian Blue (Bernie Gunther #12) by Philip Kerr

WaltScott_Prussian BlueAbout the Book

It’s 1956 and Bernie Gunther is on the run. Ordered by Erich Mielke, deputy head of the East German Stasi, to murder Bernie’s former lover by thallium poisoning, he finds his conscience is stronger than his desire not to be murdered in turn. Now he must stay one step ahead of Mielke’s retribution.

The man Mielke has sent to hunt him is an ex-Kripo colleague, and as Bernie pushes towards Germany he recalls their last case together. In 1939, Bernie was summoned by Reinhard Heydrich to the Berghof: Hitler’s mountain home in Obersalzberg. A low-level German bureaucrat had been murdered, and the Reichstag deputy Martin Bormann, in charge of overseeing renovations to the Berghof, wants the case solved quickly. If the Fuhrer were ever to find out that his own house had been the scene of a recent murder – the consequences wouldn’t bear thinking about.

And so begins perhaps the strangest of Bernie Gunther’s adventures, for although several countries and seventeen years separate the murder at the Berghof from his current predicament, Bernie will find there is some unfinished business awaiting him in Germany.

Format: ebook, hardcover, paperback (550 pp.) Publisher: Quercus Fiction
Published: 4th April 2017 (hardcover)                   Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime, Mystery

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Prussian Blue on Goodreads


My Review

I seem to make a habit of coming to book series late on in the sequence but I don’t believe I’ve ever come in as late to a series as book twelve!  That’s the situation I was faced with when reading Prussian Blue, the twelfth outing for Philip Kerr’s leading character, Bernie Gunther.   Although I was familiar with the author’s reputation and the existence of the series,  I have The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction judges to thank for making me read Prussian Blue as it was one of the thirteen books on the longlist for the 2018 prize (although it didn’t make the shortlist).  Safe to say, I now have books one to eleven added to my wish list- oh, and book number thirteen, Greeks Bearing Gifts, which was published recently.

The book has a dual timeline structure, opening in 1956 with Bernie being made an ‘offer he can’t refuse’ by the Deputy Head of the East German Stasi.  As it happens, being at a kind of crossroads in his life, it’s an offer Bernie does decide to refuse meaning he’s soon on the run from the agents sent to track him down.  ‘When you go on the run you have to believe it’s worth it, but I really wasn’t sure about that.  Not anymore.  I was already tired. I had no real energy left for life, let alone escape.’   Bernie being Bernie he does find the energy to escape, a decision which will need all his experience and guile because one of his pursuers is someone he worked with when investigating a very singular case back in 1939 – a murder on no less a place than the terrace of Hitler’s mountain home in Obersalzberg.  (Unfortunately, Hitler wasn’t there at the time but there are shades of Rogue Male by Geoffrey Household here.)

Although, as I’ve said, this was my first foray into the world of Bernie Gunther, I didn’t feel at all at a disadvantage.  With some series I find that if you come late to them you already get to know pretty much everything that’s happened in previous books making reading the earlier books redundant.   That’s not the case here.  Yes, there are little references to earlier cases and events in Bernie’s life but these only served to whet my appetite to find out more.

I really felt I got to know Bernie’s character.  He’s stubborn (pigheaded even), persistent, tough, resourceful and perceptive of human nature.   He has a bit of a problem with authority.  ‘Making a nuisance of yourself is what being a policeman is all about and suspecting people who were completely above suspicion was about the only thing that made doing the job such fun in Nazi Germany.’ Back in 1939 he was also no fan of the Nazis.  ‘The one thing about the Nazis you could always rely on what that they were not to be relied upon.  None of them.  Not ever.’

What I really loved about Bernie and the writing in general was the dry, pithy humour.  Here are some of my favourite Bernie bon mots from the book:

On the Stasi: ‘The Mounties might have had a reputation for always getting their man but the Stasi have always got the men and the women and the children too, and when they got them they made them all suffer.’

On Martin Boorman’s lair: ‘A log the size of the Sudetenland was smoking in the grate and on the walls were several electric candelabra that looked as if they’d been placed there by a mad scientist’s faithful retainer.’

A little in-joke by the author: ‘This case had it all, I told myself: absurdity, alienation, existential anxiety, and no shortage of likely and unlikely suspects.  If I’d been a very clever German of the kind who knew the difference between the sons of Zeus, Reason and Chaos, I might have been dumb enough to think I could write a book about it.’

I’m not going to go into detail about the plot but I’ll just say the book is brilliantly structured.  Both storylines are compelling and the way in which the book switches between the two never feels forced or out of place.  I really did feel I was in a safe pair of hands with this author; that I was in the presence of a master storyteller.  At one point, one of the characters says: “The end has to satisfy everyone, does it not?”  Well, this reader was definitely satisfied at the end.

In reflective mood, Bernie muses, ‘I’d always thought there was plenty of time to do things and yet, now I really thought about it, there had been not a moment to spare.’ Sadly, there was very little more time for the author.  Philip Kerr’s death in March robbed the book world of further Bernie Gunther adventures.  However, what a wonderful legacy the author leaves for future readers to enjoy.  I intend to savour every one of the other books in the series.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Compelling, suspenseful, mystery

Try something similar…The Ashes of Berlin (Gregor Reinhardt #3) by Luke McCallin (click here to read my review)


Philip KerrAbout the Author

Philip Kerr was born in Scotland in 1986.  He is best known for his Bernie Gunther series of 13 historical thrillers (plus one in the pipeline) and a children’s series, Children of the Lamp, under the name P.B. Kerr.  Philip died on 23rd March 2018.

Connect with Philip

Website  ǀ  Instagram  ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Goodreads