An audio book.
1889. Simon (taxidermist) and Gregor (botanist) live on a Buckinghamshire estate. They're lovers. Gregor receives a package from the East. It includes a fungus which shows signs of awareness. Their cleaner Jenny had a best friend Connie who recently killed herself, people say. Gregor and Simon dig up the body to use as substrate for the fungus and other plants. Simon thinks that it wasn't a suicide. Jenny suspects that Gregor and Simon are lovers. The locals thinks that too, and that Jenny is a lesbian.
Chloe, the new hybrid creature, develops. Simon likes the idea of he and Gregor having a child, andChloe could be it. Gregor is keen for botantic fame. They give Chloe a voice-box. Jenny notices that Connie's body has been dug up. The men tell her about their experiment and that it's female. They invite her to live with them.
Julian Malory (an old rival - and lover? - of Gregor) is now president of the Royal Horticultural Society. He's married. Gregor invites him to stay then disposes of him. Chloe and Jenny fall in love and run away to the watermill cottage where Jenny and her father lived. They make love there. Jenny's father is killed and Chloe absorbs Jenny. Chloe's spreading. The men transfer her to a special, sealed greenhouse built on their estate, with a copy of the cottage.
An interesting attempt. It's a historical novel (is "weaponised" an appropriate word to use?), it's gay (though we learn little of the characters' inmost thoughts), and it's Gothic fantasy/horror (though I'd have expected the hybrid to have induced more fear. Jenny's reaction is a particular surprise). Gregor murders too easily.
Other reviews
- Fiona Denton ( felt like I was left wanting in terms of characterisation. Although not all characters (Jennifer in particular felt very well formed and I genuinely cared for her), but certainly for our protagonists I often did not believe the plausibility of their choices or actions)
- AJ Reardon (I compare this book [with] the other two queer Frankenstein pastiches I’ve read in the past year (Unwieldy Creatures by Addie Tsai and Our Hideous Progeny by C.E. McGill) ... I couldn’t stand Gregor and how he treated the other characters. ... I also noticed that the characters, especially Gregor and Simon, seemed to change their opinions about things kind of on a whim, as if the author felt like he had to keep switching up their views so they could be on opposite sides of the issue.)
- the fiction fox (The personalities they did have were fairly one-dimensional and a few “change-of-mind-moments” and character interactions fell flat for me as a result. In particular, the falling out between Gregor and Simon over Chloe’s “monstrous nature” felt unearned. Neither of them had expressed such strong opinions beforehand, so the emotional change of heart felt too abrupt. Secondly, some of the themes I mentioned I loved were also explored too shallowly for my liking. With the set-up created, there was so much more emotional and ethical depth to be explored here)
- queercrossroads (Gregor [is] a man of great intellect; a sullen and withdrawn academic, akin to Frankenstein in many ways, obsessed with the creation of life ... In true Gothic fashion, their reason for isolation is an air of general ‘unease’ rather than a rational and tangible problem, despite there being one in this case ... In Simon, despite manipulation and lies thrust upon him throughout by his secretive counterpart, we see the voice of reason. The way he provides care for Gregor who, in turn, understands Simon and his eccentricities, shows a fulfilling gay relationship between two soft, warm and neurodivergent-coded POV characters. It is through this relationship that the two are redeemed)