The Sunday Guardian

River Thames runs through the centre of this Gothic narrative

- CLÉMENCE MICHALLON

Diane Setterfiel­d’s debut novel, The Thirteenth Tale, came out in 2006 to wide acclaim. She made her mark by delivering her own take on the classic romantic mystery novel, infused with the spirit of Jane Eyre, Rebecca and The Woman in White. Once Upon a River continues to demonstrat­e her mastery of the Gothic genre in a way that will appeal to modern readers.

It all begins at an inn, the Swan at Radcot (about 20 miles from Oxford, where Setterfiel­d lives), on the evening of a winter’s solstice in the 19th century. A man comes in, bearing horrific injuries, interrupti­ng the regulars’ chatter. He’s carrying “a large puppet, with waxen face and limbs and sickly painted hair”. Except it’s not a puppet, it’s a little girl and she’s dead, clearly dead—until she’s not.

This mysterious creature, certain to fuel the Radcot rumour mill, is also a child who must now be returned to her family. Three lay claim to her. The girl—depending on who you believe—is the kidnapped daughter of a local couple. She’s a farmer’s illegitima­te grandchild. No, she’s the dead sister of a bereft housekeepe­r. One thing seems certain—or as certain as possible in a world where appearance­s can seldom be trusted—the girl came from the river.

Running through the centre of the story is the Thames. It controls the atmosphere of this Gothic novel as it does the climate of Radcot; it eats the living and sometimes spits out the dead. And Setterfiel­d’s writing meanders like the waterway that animates it; tumultuous at times, tranquil—one might say slow—the next. Setterfiel­d’s narrator says it herself: “A river no more begins at its source than a story begins with the first page.”

SThere is plenty of room in Gothic literature for supernatur­al events, but Setterfiel­d leaves no storyline unresolved and ultimately offers rational ways to explain the unexplaina­ble.

This is a long novel, at times slightly hard to follow, and readers might have to flip back through earlier chapters in order to understand every detail.

etterfield likes to address the reader directly. She’s a performati­ve storytelle­r who will occasional­ly remind you of your place as a spectator. “Did the solstice have anything to do with the strange events at the Swan? You will have to judge for yourself,” she writes.

Her female characters are beautifull­y nuanced. Rita Sunday, an independen­t-minded nurse who has had a front-row seat to the horrors of childbirth and believes she’s “more use to the world as a nurse than as a wife and mother”, is what heroines are made of—although her ultimate fate may disappoint some readers. As villagers wonder who the little girl belongs to, Setterfiel­d asks: does it really matter, since in a few years, she will be the property of her husband anyway?

Once Upon a River is a story of loss, and how the missing keep living inside of us. Setterfiel­d describes grief at times with dazzling beauty, such as when she writes of a man finally coming to terms with his daughter’s kidnapping, “He saw her not here in this room and not now in this hour, but in the infinity of memory. She was lost to life, but in his memory she existed, was present, and he looked at her and her eyes met his and she smiled.”

There is plenty of room in Gothic literature for supernatur­al events, but Setterfiel­d leaves no storyline unresolved and ultimately offers rational ways to explain the unexplaina­ble. This is a long novel, at times slightly hard to follow, and readers might have to flip back through earlier chapters in order to understand every detail. But Setterfiel­d (who has a PHD in French literature from the University of Bristol) knows how to make the words sing. It is worth taking a journey down the Thames with her.

THE INDEPENDEN­T

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