Daily Mail

HISTORICAL

- EITHNE FARRY

THE NEW LIFE by Tom Crewe (Chatto £16.99, 384 pp)

TAKING Walt Whitman’s poem i Sing The Body Electric as a touchstone, Tom crewe’s debut is a serious but seductive look at queer Victorian lives lived under the shadow of oscar Wilde’s trial.

crewe uncovers the yearning stories of upper- class writer John Addington, a convention­ally married man, who is in love with working-class Frank, and shy, anxious essayist henry Ellis, who strives for a new kind of relationsh­ip with his wife Edith.

Determined to take a scientific approach to the issue of sexuality, Ellis and Addington write a controvers­ial book on the subject, and find themselves embroiled in the highpressu­re fall-out from Wilde’s guilty verdict.

Emotionall­y vivid and erotically charged, The new life brilliantl­y reveals a ‘seething and boiling’ world of ‘loneliness and anger and lust’ as crewe’s complicate­d, compelling protagonis­ts battle the restrictiv­e mores of the day.

A DANGEROUS BUSINESS by Jane Smiley (Abacus £16.99, 224 pp)

BY RIGHTS, this should be a riotous read. Set in lawless 1851 Monterey, it tells the story of Eliza ripple, who has been working in a brothel since the death of her husband.

She befriends unconventi­onal Jean, and the intrepid duo set about finding the villain who has embarked on a spree of killing women.

Suspicious of her clients and doubtful of her gut intuition, Eliza puts herself in a position of danger (abetted by beguiling, crossdress­ing Jean) to discover the culprit.

Slow of pace, strangely genial in tone for its subject matter and luxuriatin­g in the loveliness of the landscape, it’s a disconcert­ing mix of murder and the mundane.

NEEDLESS ALLEY by Natalie Marlow (Baskervill­e £16.99, 336 pp)

TRANSPLANT­ING the hardboiled hollywood noir of the 1940s to the backstreet­s and canals of 1933 Birmingham, the aptly named Marlow’s first novel has all the seamy glitter and cynical grime of the genre.

pi William garrett is war- damaged and scarred by the memories of his traumatic childhood. Teaming up with his long-time friend, handsome, charismati­c ronnie Edgerton, he makes a living setting honey traps for the unsuspecti­ng wives of the city’s wealthy men, who are looking for a way out of their marriages.

Things take a turn for the nefarious when William falls for clara — the unhappy spouse of the egregious Morton, who is a close ally of fascist oswald Mosley — and becomes immersed in a shadowy world of pornograph­y, drug-smuggling and murder. A little overwritte­n at times, and over– long, it’s nonetheles­s a promising debut that’s atmospheri­c and darkly intriguing.

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