The eighth installment of Bradford’s Harte Family Saga is a prequel to the first, A Woman of Substance (1979).
Close followers of the Harte story will recognize Shane Patrick Desmond O’Neill, known as Blackie, as dynasty founder Emma Harte’s early mentor and helper, who earns her lifelong loyalty. In 1899, Blackie, an orphan, emigrates from Ireland to Yorkshire at the age of 13. Offered a home by his kindly Uncle Patrick and his ailing Aunt Eileen, who live near Leeds, Blackie learns the building trade; he has ambitions to be an architect one day but mostly to be filthy rich. Series fans know that Emma, who shares Blackie’s ambition to get filthy rich, gets her start in Leeds, but Blackie will not meet her until three-quarters of the way in. While we’re waiting, Blackie encounters that Bradford staple, the older woman who relieves him of his virginity and then conveniently exits. Until about Page 150, no real excitement or suspense happens beyond minute descriptions of logistics, interiors, and English cuisine—heavy on the meat pies. At 17, Blackie is enlisted by a friend to help rescue fellow immigrant Moira Aherne from the “Ham Shank,” a dangerous neighborhood. Blackie suspects, based on her upper-class accent and dress, that lovely Moira has an ulterior motive for slumming with the working class, but any hopes of Moira as a source of conflict are soon dashed. None of the privileged and beautiful people in this book harbor sinister motives because Bradford seems so intent on vindicating them. Case in point: Lord Robert Lassiter, an earl who takes up a sizable and at first seemingly unrelated chunk of the book. This handsome magnate who has parlayed his family fortune into another fortune proposes to the fetching Vanessa, 17 years his junior, while still married to Lady Lucinda Lassiter. Bradford implies that Lucinda, the mother of Robert’s heir and spare, deserves to be blackmailed into a divorce. The rushed denouement obscures some genuinely interesting logistics.
As a prologue to the Harte legend, very thin gruel indeed.