Mrs Pearcey by Lottie Moggach
October 1890, Camden Square in Camden Town, north London: Hannah Teale loves to read magazines such as Girl's Own Paper, and has even sent in her own travel article - this is not published but the printed response is not totally discouraging. She is engaged to be married to Cosmo, a journalist on Fleet Street, and is looking forward to setting up a new home with him, browsing the advertisements for suitable properties to rent. Just days after dinner with his family, though, Cosmo's grandmother dies and turns out to have changed her will, leaving all her money to Cosmo's father's brother. They will have to live with his parents or her mother. Cosmo immediately starts talking of a plan to improve his prospects and earnings at work, by going undercover and being admitted to a lunatic asylum, then writing about the experience. Just a few days later, news breaks of a murder of a woman and baby nearby, and Hannah starts her own investigation. A woman called Mary Pearcey is arrested and Hannah realises she has met her.
This novel is based on a true story - Mary Pearcey was a real young woman who was convicted of murder in 1890. Hannah Teale and her fiancé, their families, friends, colleagues etc are fictional, and this novel is based on imagining all that was never reported in newspapers, and exploring some of the questions which have never been answered fully satisfactorily or at all.
The fictional plot of Mrs Pearcey is based on a series of coincidences and surprising events, but I enjoyed this story of Hannah's curiosity to look beyond the horizons of her everyday life and wedding plans. I loved all the social history, of the areas of London where everything takes place, of people, including many women, travelling to court and queueing up to get in and watch the trial. I feel I can imagine Hannah quite well, and worry about how quickly she might have become bored with the expectations of respectable married life for a woman of her place and time. Perhaps she could have found a way into earning some money as a writer, whether of magazine stories and columns or fiction of her own?