This is a variation on North and South by Mrs Elizabeth
Gaskell, which is one of my favourite books. If you’ve never read it I would
heartily recommend it. Margaret Hale’s family relocates from the countryside,
in the south of England to an industrial town in the North of England, a
fictional place called Milton in ‘Darkshire’. Here she comes face to face with
some harsh realities of life, sees want in its more unpleasant forms and meets
young mill-owner Mr John Thornton. Margaret doesn’t appreciate Mr Thornton’s
point of view on many things, including how he deals with his workers. Over
time both of their viewpoints change – he starts to see the viewpoint of his
workers, and takes a more humanitarian view, and she starts to better
understand some of the pressures he works under, and gives him the credit he
deserves for being such a strong and honourable self-made man.
I was a little thrown when Margaret’s hair colour was
changed in first line of the prologue to be red instead of black, but I soon
felt a bit more at home with the characters. This story picks up around the
time of the riot. The mill workers in Milton are striking for more pay and
Thornton has brought in mill hands from Ireland, which causes his workers to
riot in protest. In the original Margaret goads him into going outside to face
the mob to explain his viewpoint as she naively believes that he wouldn’t be in
danger, being one man against many. In North and South Margaret realises her
mistake when she sees people in the crowds with stones, and she rushes out to
protect Thornton, as one human defending another, nothing more, and she gets
injured. Here, although she attempts to protect Mr Thornton, he is the one who
gets hit by the stone. He is momentarily knocked unconscious, and Margaret starts
to see Thornton’s vulnerability much sooner than in N&S, so the scene the
next day when he visits her unfolds differently. I am not sure that it follows
that their visit would have gone so differently as in this variation, but I
went with it!
Margaret and John’s relationship unfolds in a very different
manner from canon following this initial change. One of the things I love about
variations is the ripple effect, where a change doesn’t just change things
initially but other things not directly connected with the variation. In this
case, aside from the obvious differences to John and Margaret, Margaret’s
relationship with Higgins is affected, Thornton’s relationship with Higgins
starts at a different time, things also go differently for Boucher (the man who
threw the stone and caused the strike to end), Margaret’s parents and even
Thornton’s business affairs changed. I really enjoyed this aspect of the book.
On the downside I felt that there was some repetition in the
scenes between John and Margaret – I know we needed to see their relationship
develop but there were a series of scenes that dragged a bit for me because
they were all variations on him being full of feeling for her and not wanting
to scare her off and her vacillating between not being sure how she feels for
him, and being ashamed of being affected by him. I would have liked to see a
little more variety in their interaction. I also felt that the book could have
done with a bit more tension, as it was a very smooth ride – some people may prefer
this, and I don’t like angst for the sake of angst but it felt a little flat to
me. It picked up pace towards the end, but in some respects I felt this was a
bit rushed, I would have liked to have seen a bit more detail on how some of
the other relationships developed (sorry to be vague, but I’m trying not to put
spoilers in!). The ending itself was entirely satisfactory all round, there
were no loose ends or things that I’d have liked to have seen changed.
Although this isn’t quite in the style of Mrs Gaskell, being
generally more sensual, I enjoyed this author’s style. The dialogue didn’t feel
too modern and though the spelling was generally US English there were only a
few American words. There are some sex scenes, but they are not particularly
graphic. One thing which I found a bit off-putting was that Mr Thornton was
often referred to as ‘The Master’ out of context – it’s fine when he’s being
the master of the mill, or he’s being thought of as the master of the mill even
though he’s doing something else but out of context it was just odd.
On the whole, I enjoyed my first foray into North & South-based reading outside of non-published fan fiction. In Consequence is not this author’s only book based on North & South, and I’ve added her other book, A Heart for Milton to my wishlist.
Thanks for the review, I didn't realise that North and South had any variations
ReplyDeleteHi Vesper. There are a few North & South variations and continuations out there, probably about ten that I know of and more that I don't! This is the only published one I've read, but I had a recommendation that 'Unmapped Country' by Chrissie Elmore is good, and it has excellent reviews on Amazon UK so I might try that one next.
ReplyDeleteThanks to your review I had to buy this now ;). I read A heart for Milton a while ago and liked it and am really interested about this variation.
ReplyDeleteI love North and South so much, love that some authors try their pens on adaptions of this too!
I will have to try and read A Heart for Milton, Katrin. I also want to read that one by Chrissie Elmore. Why can't I read more quickly?! So many books need me to read them! Hope you enjoy this one :)
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