Affinity
by Sarah Waters
Paperback- $13.04

“Gothic tale, psychological study, puzzle narrative…This is gripping, astute fiction that feeds the mind and senses.”—The Seattle ...

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  "Excellent choice for a break from really challenging/controversial material" by susanb64 (see profile) 08/20/06

Don't let the term "historical mystery" put you off. Although it is indeed both historical and something of a mystery, the book has much more to offer. The story itself is a real page turner and will be an easy read for most everyone (always appreciated.) It pulls the reader in quickly and moves along at a great clip. There will be much to discuss and the answers will almost never be right or wrong. A very chilling, thought provoking book. If your group is suffering from exhaustion after reading too many difficult books and wading through too many heated discussions of controversial books (as ours has been,) I recommend this book as a nice return to why we love to read. Above all, Affinity is a gripping story told by a master storyteller.

 
  "It was just "okay" - I was expecting a ghost story, so was disappointed." by sallysue53 (see profile) 04/26/07

 
  "A rambunctious tour through the various underworlds of late-19th-century London: music halls, boy-hustling and cruising scenes, aristocratic sapphism, and dyke socialism, all through the eyes of a cro" by oozers55 (see profile) 06/08/07

At Millbrook Prison, in 1874 London, the reader meets Margaret Prior, a lady "Visitor" who comes to offer solace to the female inmates. Our Miss Prior has recently been ill, recuperating slowly from the death of her beloved father, now determined to commit her energies to the less fortunate. Millbrook Prison is a huge edifice of gothic proportions, towers and tunnels and geometric patterns leading to the stark chill of individual cells, where the greater part of each prisoner's day is spent in isolation.

Miss Prior is interested in the lives of the women prisoners -- particularly Selina Dawes, a spirit medium jailed for fraud and assault, who seems a gentle, if lonely, soul. Miss Prior is Selina's solitary visitor, beside the "spirits" that whisper encouragement every evening when the lights are extinguished.

This is Victorian England at its apex, when women of Miss Prior's class are wrapped in innocence, nursing a constant need for comfort and protection. When Margaret forms an attachment to Selina, she keeps her thoughts to herself, speaking only through the pages of her diary. The obsession appears to be mutual; Selina calls Margaret "Aurora", promises that Margaret is her "affinity", that together they are two halves of one whole.

On a bitter January day, Margaret visits Selina one last time, the night chosen for Selina's carefully plotted escape. Margaret has made secret preparations: passports, travel arrangements, clothing, adequate funds. Selina promises to come for her beloved "Aurora" before dawn. Does Selina escape, and what are the consequences of this act for Margaret? Affinity is a masterpiece of the tension of the unexpected. Page by page, author Sarah Waters beguiles the reader, step by step through a twisting maze, as she leads us to the shocking denouement of her masterful tale.


 
  "Great plot twists" by mztupelo (see profile) 08/15/07

I enjoyed this story completely. The writing was dead on, flawlessly protraying the Victorian era. I found the characters interesting and the story quite compelling. This was one of the few books that everyone in the book group enjoyed. This story also produced a fantastic discussion. Highly recommend this title.

 
  "Affinity" by akela (see profile) 12/27/11

 
  "Affinity" by glynngamble (see profile) 10/24/13

It starts a bit slow, but worth the read. It provides excellent perspective of prison life in the 1870s for women as well as familial roles, especially that of the female. The surprise ending is dark, although a total "gotcha".

 
  "Read till the end" by [email protected] (see profile) 09/15/15

Really, the best part is the last 30 pages so keep reading.

 
  "" by ericaschanno (see profile) 09/15/15

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