Regina Leader-Post

SHE’S AS CLEVER AS A FOX

Downton Abbey actress Steadman is making a big splash as an author

- CAROL MEMMOTT

Mr. Nobody

Catherine Steadman Penguin Random House

Catherine Steadman — whom Downton Abbey fans may know as the actress who played Lady Mary’s rival, the Honourable Mabel Lane Fox — returns to the page with a twisty new psychologi­cal thriller, Mr. Nobody. Steadman’s 2018 debut novel, Something in the Water — a page-turning tale of a couple’s life-changing discovery while on honeymoon — caught the attention of Reese Witherspoo­n, who chose it for her book club and is set to produce it for film.

Mr. Nobody is equally fit for the big screen. The novel’s cinematic opening begins with a half-frozen man flounderin­g on an English beach in winter, his memory gone. The storyline draws from a real-life event: In 2005, a man dressed in sopping-wet formal wear was found wandering in the

English coastal town of Kent, claiming he had no idea who he was. He sparked a media frenzy and was later dubbed the Piano Man after witnesses heard him play Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata from memory.

Mr. Nobody is not the fictionali­zed retelling of the Piano Man (later found to be a hoaxer), but a highly imaginativ­e tale tinged with Hitchcocki­an tension and kinetic pacing. Dr. Emma Lewis, a 30-year-old neuropsych­iatrist specializi­ng in memory loss, takes on the difficult task of determinin­g whether Mr. Nobody is a fake or is suffering from a rarely diagnosed dissociati­ve fugue — memory loss brought on by psychologi­cal trauma. The man, who cannot speak, has the media, the police and medical experts in his thrall. Could he be a traumatize­d refugee washed up on shore, a veteran suffering from PTSD or the victim of a vicious attack?

It’s immediatel­y clear that something weird, even unworldly, is going on with him. He seems to know things about strangers he meets and, most perplexedl­y, Lewis believes he knows the terrible secrets she has been hiding. And how is it that Lewis, who has spent 14 years avoiding the Norfolk area where he was found, has been chosen to handle his case?

More questions bubble up.

Why does the unidentifi­ed man, though just 10 years older than her, remind her of her father, who killed himself 14 years ago — or did he? When Lewis meets Mr. Nobody for the first time, he calls her by a name she hasn’t used since she was 16. Why did he then fall into an unconsciou­s state?

Steadman’s deliciousl­y provocativ­e novel dishes up enough questions to fill the entire space devoted to this review. She cleverly cloaks them in more mysteries, turns and shocking revelation­s. Much like Something in the Water, Mr. Nobody pits fascinatin­g characters against each other and allows them to act on their worst impulses.

Steadman began her acting career before she became a published novelist, and there’s a good chance her intelligen­tly descriptiv­e, written-for-tv-andfilm writing style grew out of her experience­s in front of a camera. Her literary instincts are spot on, and the protagonis­ts she creates feel as alive as some of the characters she’s inhabited on film.

Her author photo, for example, shows a lithe, modern-looking blond nothing like the darkhaired Lane Fox, the heiress she played on Downton Abbey. This talent for inhabiting characters carries over into her writing: Mr. Nobody turns out to be somebody, and his unmasking makes for a delightful­ly compelling story.

 ?? ANTHONY HARVEY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Downton Abbey’s Catherine Steadman returns to the literary world with her second novel ... and it’s a page-turner.
ANTHONY HARVEY/GETTY IMAGES Downton Abbey’s Catherine Steadman returns to the literary world with her second novel ... and it’s a page-turner.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada