Bellman & Black by Diane Setterfield

Bellman & Black

by Diane Setterfield

The long-awaited new fiction from the author of THE THIRTEENTH TALE is a haunting Victorian tale of love, loss and the mystery of death.

As a boy, William Bellman commits one small cruel act that appears to have unforseen and terrible consequences. The killing of a rook with his catapult is soon forgotten amidst the riot of boyhood games. And by the time he is grown, with a wife and children of his own, he seems indeed, to be a man blessed by fortune.

Until tragedy strikes, and the stranger in black comes, and William Bellman starts to wonder if all his happiness is about to be eclipsed. Desperate to save the one precious thing he has left, he enters into a bargain. A rather strange bargain, with an even stranger partner, to found a decidedly macabre business.

And Bellman & Black is born.

Reviewed by celinenyx on

3 of 5 stars

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Contrary to what the subtitle might make you want to believe, there are very little ghost story elements in Bellman and Black. Many people have been disappointed with this book because they loved the other book by this author. I haven't read her other book, so I went into the book without any expectations.

The story follows the life of William Bellman, a boy that kills a rook when he was young. Apart from William's life, there is barely any plot.

I have the vague impression that I've either (1) completely missed the point of the book or (2) the point was so terribly done that that what I got was all that there was. I think I understand what Ms Setterfield was going for. Bellman and Black tries to be a haunting book about a boy whose life is set in stone after one action. Instead we read a meandering tale about one man that goes through life, does things, with some random dude that pops up once in a while doing absolutely nothing.

Rooks are a huge part of the story, and the author tries to convince us of the awesomeness and cleverness of them. To be honest I don't give a flying Frisbee about birds. The tiny chapters describing the (made up) history of rooks felt forced and admittedly pretty dull.

William is a business man. First he works in a mill where textile is made and dyed, and after a while he becomes manager of the mill and spreads his empire. Huge parts of the book (almost all of it) deals with William doing businessy things. It describes how he treats the employees, how he goes around his note keeping, how he barely spends any time at home... Again, almost no plot here.

I honestly don't know what to make of Bellman and Black. The writing is easy and nice, which is probably the only reason I managed to finish the book. It wasn't even a bad book, just a rather pointless one.

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  • Started reading
  • 25 March, 2014: Finished reading
  • 25 March, 2014: Reviewed