Summary
"A delightful, dark, and entertaining romp . . . Molly Tanzer is at the top of her form in this beautifully constructed novel." -- Jeff VanderMeer, best-selling author of the Southern Reach trilogy
Victorian London is a place of fluid social roles, vibrant arts culture, fin-de-siècle wonders . . . and dangerous underground diabolic cults. Fencer Evadne Gray cares for none of the former and knows nothing of the latter when she's sent to London to chaperone her younger sister, aspiring art critic Dorina.
At loose ends after Dorina becomes enamored with their uncle's friend, Lady Henrietta "Henry" Wotton, a local aristocrat and aesthete, Evadne enrolls in a fencing school. There, she meets George Cantrell, an experienced fencing master like she's always dreamed of studying under. But soon, George shows her something more than fancy footwork--he reveals to Evadne a secret, hidden world of devilish demons and their obedient servants. George has dedicated himself to eradicating demons and diabolists alike, and now he needs Evadne's help. But as she learns more, Evadne begins to believe that Lady Henry might actually be a diabolist . . . and even worse, she suspects Dorina might have become one too.
Combining swordplay, the supernatural, and Victorian high society, Creatures of Will and Temper reveals a familiar but strange London in a riff on Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray that readers won't soon forget.
"An artful, witty, Oscar Wilde pastiche with the heart of a paranormal thriller." -- Diana Gabaldon, best-selling author of Outlander
Publisher's Weekly Review
Tanzer (The Pleasure Merchant) mixes Oscar Wilde's The Portrait of Dorian Gray with queer romance and demonology in this subtle, beautiful Victorian-era fantasy novel. Evadne and Dorina Gray, sisters, come from the countryside to stay with their uncle, the painter Basil Hallward, in London; Dorina hopes this will foster her dreams of becoming an art critic. Evadne, reluctantly chaperoning her headstrong sister, would prefer to focus entirely on her own dream of improving her fencing. And Basil, whose lover, Oliver Wotton, has just died, is too wracked with grief to pay much attention to either of them. Lady Henrietta Wotton, Oliver's sister, takes Dorina under her wing, and their budding romance aggravates Evadne intensely. The perfectly depicted relationship between the sisters takes center stage in a complex (though never overplayed) web of art, swordplay, romance, and, much to the sisters' surprise, actual demons. Gorgeously portrayed three-dimensional characters and sensual prose propel this smoothly entertaining story to an emotionally affecting end. Agent: Cameron McClure, Donald Maass Literary. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
In this urban-fantasy retelling of Dorian Gray, we enter a decadent Victorian London filled with all of the rules and manners we know, but with the addition of two fascinating frames fencing and demons. The Gray sisters, Dorina and Evadne, come from the country to spend a few weeks in the London home of their artist uncle, Basil. Young and flighty Dorina is excited to enter society and is quickly taken under the wing of the mysterious and enchanting Lady Henry. But Lady Henry and Uncle Basil have a secret, one that lives inside of Henry and possibly others. Evadne, a stoic fencer, is sent to be her impetuous sibling's chaperone but soon finds herself immersed in a competitive fencing school, one with an underground agenda that puts the sisters in opposite corners of an epic battle. Tanzer wraps the reader up in a world where nothing is as it seems and notions of what is good or evil, moral or amoral, are up for grabs. With a satisfying mix of strong characters, lush descriptions, steady pacing, and plenty of exciting action sequences, this is a great choice for fans of supernatural fantasy set in the Victorian era.--Spratford, Becky Copyright 2017 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Sisters Evadne and Dorina Gray are separated not only by age but also by their vastly different temperaments. Elder Evadne is socially awkward and obsessed with fencing, while 17-year-old Dorina is sexually precocious, her seductions of other young women in the neighborhood cause some trouble. Evadne is saddled with the task of chaperoning her sister on a summer trip to London to stay with their Uncle Basil, an artist with whom Dorina wants to study. Soon after their arrival, Dorina falls under the influence of Lady Henry, a friend of Basil who offers to show her the beauties of the city. While Evadne doesn't trust Lady Henry, she could never guess that the small salon she hosts is really a circle for diabolists. VERDICT The Victorian era setting of Tanzer's latest (after the marvelous Weird Western Vermilion) adds a formality that contrasts nicely with the dueling and demonic communion. At its center is a difficult sibling relationship and the Gray sisters' parallel efforts to find somewhere to belong.-MM © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Excerpts
PROLOGUE The French doors stood open, letting in a breeze that stirred the plants on the veranda like playful fingers, but it remained stubbornly, oppressively hot in Basil Hallward's studio. The heat intensified the odor of oil paints, canvas, and turpentine, as well as the heavy perfume of crushed flowers, but it was such a pleasure to look upon her friend as he painted that Lady Henrietta Wotton did not stir from the divan upon which she lay, a cigarette dangling between her fingers, the smoke of which carried the curiously potent odor of fresh ginger. Basil did not speak as he worked, as was his custom-- and while it was hers to comment on matters of the day as he dabbed and daubed, today she only watched. She was content to simply hearken to the muffled rumblings of London that filtered faintly into the room from beyond the little oasis of Basil's townhouse and patio garden. The reason for Lady Henry's quietude was respect for her friend's recent poor health, as well as for his subject matter. Basil was hard at work on a portrait -- in fact, was very close to finishing it. It was a unique piece -- Basil typically painted only from life, and yet, much to their mutual dismay, the subject of this picture was no longer counted among the living. Even so, the painting had the startling appearance of vitality; its colors were not those of grief, nor was its subject somber in his funereal portrait. The slender man was laughing, just as he had done in life, standing carelessly against a pillar with his hands in his pockets, his expensive suit as artfully rumpled as his fair hair. And though said hair had a touch of gray in it, he was consummately youthful in appearance, and seemed as untouched by sorrow as a boy half his age. Basil, however, looked years older than when he had begun to paint the piece, though it had only been a few months since he had applied gesso to the canvas. Lady Henry raised the fragrant cigarette to her lips and inhaled deeply. As the mingled essences of the tobacco and ginger hit her bloodstream, she felt the independent presence that always lurked at the back of her mind stir slightly, acknowledging what she saw -- seeing for itself, but through Lady Henry's eyes. A sense of appreciation and longing touched her consciousness as the colors intensified. The shapes became more shapely; the beauty, more beautiful. I miss him so much, she thought. The presence lovingly acknowledged but did not partake of her sorrow. She did not expect it to. The demon that had been her constant companion for over a decade could not feel regret. It was not a part of its nature. Currently, it was more concerned with the painting. It really was as perfect a reproduction of the man as was possible. Lady Henry would know, for she had known the subject all his life. He was -- or rather, he had been -- her brother. Her twin, in fact. The only person in the world who might have known him better was the one who painted him now -- the dark, brooding Dionysus to the brilliant Apollo on the canvas. Now that there was more silver mixed in with the black of Basil's hair, he was even more the night, if the man in the painting was the day. With a heavy sigh, Basil set down his brush and stepped back. "Are you finished?" asked Lady Henry. "I've done as much as I can today without risking muddying it," he replied. "Well then, let's step outside and have a cocktail," she suggested. "Or champagne? I don't think it's too early to celebrate your triumph. It's your best work yet." She paused. "Though before I get excited, I suppose I should ask if you have any decent champagne in the house?" "By whose standards -- yours, or mine?" It made her heart glad to hear him chuckle, even if it was only an echo of his former hearty laugh. "Decent enough to mix with absinthe, I'd imagine." "Lovely," said Lady Henry. "Let's do that." She rose as Basil rang the bell, and in a cacophony of crackling joints, stretched her arms, back, and legs. Lady Henry was wiry and fair, like her brother had been -- youthful, but clearly in her middle years -- and she, too, cut a dashing figure in her sack coat and trousers. Even before her brother's death Lady Henry Wotton had scandalized London society by wearing men's clothing in public, but while she and her twin had been built along the same lines, Oliver's suits had been too large in the shoulder and too tight in the hips. She knew, for she'd tried them all on in hopes of pinching them. After his death, she had had his wardrobe tailored to her own measurements, and not just because Oliver's taste had been impeccable. She missed her brother every day, and it comforted her to wear his clothes. A maid appeared without a sound, bearing a chilled bottle in a bucket filled with ice, and then departed just as silently as Basil uncorked it with a faint hiss. After splashing absinthe in two coupes, he topped them off with the champagne and handed one over to Lady Henry. "To your finest work yet," said Henry, toasting her friend as she admired the painting from afar. "I do hope when you're finished you'll bring it round and show it off to our -- or rather my -- colleagues? Give us the first look, before you send it anywhere?" "I don't think I shall send it anywhere . . . at least, not for some time," answered Basil, his back to the painting. Henry wondered if he was trying not to look at it. "Why on earth not?" "Don't laugh at me, but it is too personal. The wound is too fresh. I cannot have it judged by anyone, or remarked upon by common people. Or uncommon people, for that matter . . . save for you ." Henry gave him a playful smile. "Really? Only me?" Basil looked a bit uncomfortable. "Yes, though I know, of course, that you are never truly alone." The demon stirred again in Henry's mind, hearing itself referred to, though obliquely. "Neither was Oliver," said Henry gently. "I know, I know, but neither does that mean I am eager to show off this canvas to my former social circle." Henry almost choked on a swallow of champagne. "Former! But surely you do not mean your absence at my gatherings to be a permanent one?" Basil did not answer; instead, he wandered onto the veranda. Henry followed him. She had designed the garden herself, and was pleased to see that enough light came in through the fronds and branches to keep the patio bright, while still creating the illusion that they were in a country garden rather than the heart of Chelsea. "Baz," she said, now as serious as she had moments ago been playful, "tell me truly. Do you mean to leave us forever?" "And what if I did? Would you compel me to return?" "Never," she said. "It is not our way." The presence in her mind heartily agreed, but she did not tell Basil this. "But . . ." "But?" "But I will miss you! We all would. Your absence has been noticed, and not just by us." "Do not speak to me of that thing !" Basil hissed, whirling around, spilling his drink all over his hand. He cursed, and hastily sucked his fingers dry. "My apologies, Harry," he said, his voice low lest they be overheard, "but surely you must see why it is impossible. Really, I'm astonished you remain in contact with it after Oliver -- after he, after they . . ." Henry put her hand on her friend's shoulder and squeezed gently. "My dearest Basil, if there is one person in this world who regrets Oliver's death more than you do, it is I. I was only his sister; the two of you, well, calling you lovers seems like an insult, given the depth of your connection. Oliver and I shared a womb, but the two of you shared a life ." She wandered away from Basil and set her drink down on a low table in order to withdraw another cigarette from the silver case in her breast pocket. She did not offer Basil one, and though he did not as a rule mind smoke, he wrinkled his nose when she lit it. Out of courtesy, when she exhaled, she blew away from him. "That said," she continued, "he and I did share something, something that made us closer than siblings. When we decided to summon it, to invite it into our lives, our bodies, our minds, we knew what we were doing. And when Oliver did what he did . . . perhaps it does not comfort you, knowing he chose his fate, but he did choose it. You know as well as I that unlike others of its type our demon is not the sort to require that sort of sacrifice. Thus, I choose to remain a hierophant of that which has let so much beauty into my life. Beauty, after all, is the only thing that matters." Excerpted from Creatures of Will and Temper by Molly Tanzer All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.