The Electrical Venus

· Bonnier Publishing Fiction Ltd.
4.0
1 review
Ebook
368
Pages
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About this ebook

A spellbinding story of romance and discovery set in the filth and thrill of an eighteenth-century side-show, perfect if you loved The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock or Caraval. Nominated for the CILIP CARNEGIE MEDAL 2019.

Can this shocking new feeling be love, or is it electrickery?

In a lowly side-show fair in eighteenth-century England, teenager Mim is struggling to find her worth as an act. Not white, but not black enough to be truly exotic, her pet parrot who speaks four languages is a bigger draw than her. But Alex, the one-armed boxer boy, sees her differently. And she, too, feels newly interested in him.

But then Dr Fox arrives with his scientific kit for producing 'electrickery' - feats of electrical magic these bawdy audiences have never seen before. To complete his act, Fox chooses Mim to play the 'Electrical Venus'. Her popularity - and the electric-shocking kisses she can provide for a penny - mean takings are up, slop is off the menu and this spark between her and Fox must surely be love.

But is this starring role her true value, or is love worth more than a penny for an electrifying kiss?

Praise for The Electrical Venus

'A magical book with magical characters . . . Mayhew's language zips and sparkles on the page' Maria McCann, author of The Wilding

'Brilliant . . . A vivid evocation of a travelling fair in 1749' The Sunday Times on the BBC4 Radio Play

Ratings and reviews

4.0
1 review
Midge Odonnell
June 4, 2018
This is a charmingly quirky tale of travelling sideshow people and their efforts to entertain the general populace and, most importantly, get coin. With illustrations of handbills that promise the most exotic of treats we get to meet the main players in the novel: The One Arm'd Boy - Alex suffered a near fatal accident in early childhood and now has only one arm. Raised by the Graingers he has been taught to juggle and perform acrobatic feats for the pleasure of the public. The Dwaff - Abel is short of stature and light of finger regularly boosting the sideshows earning by picking pockets and rigging games. The No-Legg'd Brute - Joe has no legs, whether by accident or accident of birth we know not. Despite his appearence and his gruff voice he is a kind and gentle man who performs feats of strength for his slop. George - An Amazonian Green Parrot whose mimicry knows no bounds and who frequently fails to perform when called upon. The Girl-Exotic - Sweet Mim, sold to the Grainger's as a baby when her mother couldn't hide her dalliance with, what we assume, was a servant. Coffee coloured skin and a smattering of learning she is the lowest rung on the sideshow ladder. Even the mathematical pig and the dancing geese get better slop than her. When the show meets up with Dr Sebastian Fox things look to be taking a turn for the better as he introduces them to the delights of Electrickery and their coffers suddenly swell. You do get drawn in to this peculiar world and the smattering of language from the 18th Century just makes it seem all the more immersive. We follow the fortunes of Mim and Alex as they try to cope with the change in fortunes brought about by the Electrickery and as they each rise and fall in favour time and again. Theirs is a warm friendship that struggles to cope with their adulthood and relative importance to the Graingers and Dr Fox. Perhaps the best character though is George. He injects the humour in to the book and smoothly interrupts the most sincere soul searching with his outbursts. Albeit in language not suitable for a lady. This book was so much better than I thought it was going to be with rich characters and a real sense of time and place. There is love, there is peril, there is wealth and there is pecuniary. Most of all there is humanity.
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About the author

Julie Mayhew is the author of Red Ink (shortlisted for the 2014 Branford Boase Award), The Big Lie (winner of the 2016 Sidewise Award for Alternate History) and the critically acclaimed Mother Tongue. She also writes for the stage and for film, and has been twice nominated for Best Original Drama at the BBC Audio Drama Awards for her radio plays -including a 2016 recognition for the The Electrical Venus, the drama on which this book is based. Julie grew up in Peterborough and originally trained as a journalist, then as an actress, before turning to writing because she couldn't find enough brilliant roles for girls.
www.juliemayhew.co.uk
Twitter: @juliemayhew
Instagram: JulieMayhew

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