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The Confessions of Frannie Langton
A Historical Fiction Novel by Sara Collins
Subgenres:
- Georgian London,
- Sapphic Romance,
- Courtroom Drama
This book is for you if you're into...
- Historical thrillers set in both Jamaica and Georgian London
- Courtroom dramas with scandal, forbidden love, and unreliable memory
- Stories confronting race, class, and oppression head-on
From Little Stack
You may have seen the adaptation of this one, but the book is always better, so I suggest picking it up. This remarkable debut is one I still think about regularly even six years after reading.
It tells the story of Frannie Langton, called the Mulatta Murderess by the papers after she is arrested for the murder of her Master and Mistress. But Frannie protests that she is innocent, and she can’t have murdered them because she was in love with her mistress, Marguerite. Their love story is a sweet, sapphic tale set against a backdrop of homophobia, racism and classism. But how did it all end in murder?
A servant and former slave is accused of murdering her employer and his wife in this breathtaking debut that moves from a Jamaican sugar plantation to the fetid streets of Georgian London—a gripping historical thriller with echoes of Alias Grace, The Underground Railroad, and The Paying Guests.
All of London is abuzz with the scandalous case of Frannie Langton, accused of the brutal double murder of her employers, renowned scientist George Benham and his eccentric French wife, Marguerite. Crowds pack the courtroom, eagerly following every twist, while the newspapers print lurid theories about the killings and the mysterious woman being tried at the Old Bailey.
The testimonies against Frannie are damning. She is a seductress, a witch, a master manipulator, a whore.
But Frannie claims she cannot recall what happened that fateful evening, even if remembering could save her life. She doesn't know how she came to be covered in the victims' blood. But she does have a tale to tell: a story of her childhood on a Jamaican plantation, her apprenticeship under a debauched scientist who stretched all bounds of ethics, and the events that brought her into the Benhams' London home—and into a passionate and forbidden relationship.
Though her testimony may seal her conviction, the truth will unmask the perpetrators of crimes far beyond murder and indict the whole of English society itself.
A brilliant, searing depiction of race, class, and oppression that penetrates the skin and sears the soul, it is the story of a woman of her own making in a world that would see her unmade.
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