Search This Blog

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Things in Jars by Jess Kidd

Jess Kidd loves words.  The words seem to spill out of her--whirling around, creating vivid images and wonderful prose with unexpected juxtapositions and all kinds of figurative language.  They don't feel like deliberate choices as much as thoughts emerging from someone whose use of language is so imaginative, fresh, and creative that she can't contain it.

I loved Himself for those reasons and more, but liked Mr. Flood's Last Resort (also titled The Hoarder) less.  Kidd's characters, however, are wonderful even when the plot is a little iffy.

Her latest book, Things in Jars--especially with Kidd's amazing prose--is a mystery, a fairy tale, a nightmare, magical realism, a ghost story, social commentary, a mysterious amalgamation of genres that does not fit any one category.

Set in 1863, Bridie Devine, private investigator with a connection to the police, smokes her pipe on her way to inspect a crypt with the skeleton remains of a mother and child...and finds the transparent figure of former boxer Ruby Doyle lounging on his grave.  She doesn't believe in ghosts, yet the marvelously tattooed Ruby Doyle (The Decorated Doyle), definitely dead and transparent, seems to know her.  And so the story begins.

Ruby Doyle, the decorated pugilist whose tattoos move and react to situations, becomes Bridie's (initially) unwanted partner.  Doyle knows Bridie, but Bridie cannot remember ever knowing Doyle.  He accompanies her home and on her adventures, waiting for Bridie to remember him and their connection, and Bridie's feelings for Ruby Doyle confuse her as she begins to appreciate  his company.

The main story line begins when Bridie is engaged to find the kidnapped daughter of a baronet.  Christabel Berwick, a strange six-year-old with unusual powers and strange needle-like teeth, is a mystery in and of herself.  Is Christabel the embodiment of the Irish myth of the merrow?  Bridie suspects a possible reason for the little girl's kidnapping...and she doesn't like it at all.

Interspersing chapters reveal more of Bridie's past and diverge to examine the activities of other characters.  Each character is the delightful result of descriptions amplified in the style of Dickens as in this description of Cridge, the curate:
"He is a young man with an unfavorable look about him.  Slight of stature and large of head, with light-brown hair that cleaves thinly to an ample cranium with bumps and contours enough to astound even a practiced phrenologist.  His complexion is wan and floury as an overcooked potato and his mouth was made for sneering."
Moving from past to present and back again, threads that are begun in the past are gradually woven into the present.  Aside from such wonderful characters as Bridie herself, we meet Ruby Doyle, Cora (Bridie's seven foot tall housemaid), Bad Dorcas, the Prudhoes, Valentine Rose, and wicked Gideon Eames.  London becomes both setting and character in this fantastical adventure.

It is difficult not to become enchanted by Kidd's prose, although it occasionally interrupts the plot. :)

Read in November; blog review scheduled for Jan. 19, 2020.

NetGalley/Atria Books
?Historical Mystery/Fantasy?  Feb. 4, 2020.  Print length:  384 pages.

16 comments:

  1. Enchanting prose and quirky characters...sounds like fun. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I also loved Himself by Kidd. Her characters and prose are unique and funny and weird!

      Delete
  2. Well, this doesn't sound like anything I've read before!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kidd's books are not like anything I've read before either. Strange and fantastical and beautifully written. I didn't like Mr. Flood's Last Resort nearly as much as Himself and Things in Jars, but I would read anything she's written. :)

      Delete
  3. Sounds like a lot going on in this book with so many elements. I've not heard of this author though so I'll have to check out her books.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Try Himself or this one. See what you think, Melody. I owe you a letter and will get to it...soon?

      Delete
  4. I do want to try one of Jess Kidd's books! Sometimes the fantastical elements in fiction don't work for me...it depends on how they are handled. The fact that you compare her descriptions to Dickens makes me even more curious since I adore him as an author. My Library has both Himself and Mr. Flood's Last Resort for me to try. :D

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Try Himself--I didn't really care for Mr. Flood's Last Resort. And of course, for the Dickens-like descriptions read Things in Jars. All that foggy London and strange characters seem to have the Dickens influence. :)

      Delete
  5. All the books you have featured recently have sounded irresistible. I haven't tried this author before, but I know Himself got a lot of praise. I will have to give this one a try.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hope you like it, Wendy. It is a strange experience!

      Delete
  6. You have read some interesting books lately. I wish these would magically appear in my Little Free Library.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. All of these have been on my Kindle, but I do have some books for your library--I just have to get them to you!

      Delete
  7. I love the cover (Things in Jars) and, I have this on my TBR list; thanks for sharing and reminding me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kidd's covers have been consistent in style and all are beautiful. Hope you enjoy it when you get a chance--those TBR lists are so long!

      Delete
  8. This book seems to have a bit of everything. I love the sound of it and will have to add it to my list. Great review!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was an amazing romp through language and imagination!

      Delete