Doubleday Random House UK, Transworld Publishers February 11 2016 |
In the long hot summer of 1911, the
inmates of Sharston Mental Asylum in Yorkshire swelter in the heat. A touch of
breeze and a glimmer of sky are only possible for a few fortunate men who find
release in the oblivion of hard manual labour, and yet, just sometimes, a
glimpse of swallows in flight reminds them what it is to be human. The women,
often subjected to repetitive and monotonous drudgery, have no such escape from
the mundane of this desperate world. Closed doors and segregation mark this as
a place of hopelessness, a place were neither love nor charity is allowed to
flourish.
Doctor Charles Fuller, one of
medical officers, struggling to find his own place in the world, uses his love
of music to try to get into the psyche of the damaged souls in his care. A weekly dance held in the ornate ballroom is the only time that the men and
women are allowed to come together, and in a macabre ritual, the social
niceties, whilst not observed in the usual sense, allow the participants a
small dream of pleasure. John, Ella and Clem are inmates, incarcerated in
Sharston Asylum for very different reasons and yet, though lost, lonely,
forgotten and hopelessly subjugated, they find that their lives are
irretrievably tangled together.
There is no doubt that the author
has done a commendable job in allowing this story to take flight, and by
weaving together some factual information with compelling fiction, a strong
story emerges. Her extensive research reveals not just the sensitive subject of
mental illness in an age when incarceration was the only viable treatment, but it also exposes the shadowy and rather disturbing world of selective eugenics. The
characters literally leap off the page and enter into your subconscious. They
beguile and mesmerise, they make you both angry and sad and undoubtedly, they
make you rant at the injustice of a system which created more far problems than
it ever solved.
By giving a voice to those
hopelessly demoralised souls who spent their lives languishing in mental institutions
for the simple offense of being different, Anna Hope has written a book of
extraordinary compassion and overwhelming beauty.
Best Read with....thick slices of
humble pie and restorative gulps of brandy...
About the Author
Anna Hope is a writer and actress. Her first novel, Wake was published, to great acclaim in 2014.
Twitter @Anna_Hope
End Note :
It’s fair to say that most major
towns in the UK had a mental institution of some kind. They were those crumbling
Victorian edifices, which stood like sentinels, guardians of terrible secrets
which were too harrowing to recall. I remember as a child passing the red brick
walls of a local asylum and my mother quietly telling me that that's where the
sad people lived. And as a nurse working in Leeds in the 1980s, I am familiar with the psychiatric hospital, High Royds, in Menston, on which The
Ballroom is based.
My thanks to NetGalley and Random House UK, Transworld Publishers for the opportunity to read this book.
~***~
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