The Crimson Heirlooms- Hunter Dennis
This historical fiction reads more like a book written in
the 19th Century than one written in our time, which says something
for the quality of the Dennis’s creativeness. One must qualify that by pointing
out that there is a great deal of modern rather than 19th Century
word usage and sentence structure, but for the modern reader that simply
sharpens understanding, rather than detracting from the historic placement. Time
shifting word patterns have often give even the greatest literature from past
centuries a turgid heaviness. So I think the author was right to not too deeply
play his use of 19th century ‘building materials’.
As one is absorbed in the series of period specific vignettes,
which make up the book, the descriptive detail effortlessly levers imagination
back through time. I would find it hard to believe that Dennis hasn’t read a
great many of the classic fictions from the period, allowing his writing to absorb
something of those famous authors tones. The modern reader needs to be warned
that this book also has a slow rhythm, is very long descriptive detail and has
a primary plot that is almost an irrelevance. What Davis does do with a certain
brilliance is draw us to the ‘atmospheres’, the social drama, the real histories,
of the 18th and 19th centuries.
My strongest criticism is firstly that the book is overlong,
being at least two good-sized reads in one, and that, secondly, I see no value
in flicking backwards and forwards in time. The later confused me, causing a
struggle to put together the jigsaw of characters and events. I am, I’m sure, hampered
by being a particularly slow reader, so necessitating many periods of reading
interwoven with the demands of my real world. Particularly with my memory being
far short of excellent, I was too often left half drowned. The book is far too
long for all but a few to read at one or even two concentrated sittings. I
would love to see this book re-engineered into a simple linear chronology.
Overall, it would be most ingenuous of me not to give this
book five of those ridiculous stars. However, I feel this reads more like a
work in progress than a finished article. This is the first part of a series, but
that doesn’t mean that this volume is correctly ended in adagio rather than
climatic allegro. The read finishes with an intellectual plot resolution of
sorts, but with none of the fortissimo that some earlier episodes in the book
achieved. In short, a wonderful read that is somewhat spoiled by a lack of
input from a good content editor.
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