Historical detail steadies a lively yarn set in NZ's early showbiz days.
Don't be fooled by Jenny Pattrick's new novel, Skylark (Black Swan, $37.99). It's a romp of a read, a page-turner that's incredibly easy to whizz through. It takes a writer of considerable skill, plus a lot of painstaking effort, to construct a blend of history and fiction such as this, and do such a wonderful job.
Skylark is the story of New Zealand's fledgling entertainment industry. It's set in the mid- to late-1800s and presented as a collection of archives put together by a fictional researcher, Eleanor de Mountfort, whose comments appear throughout the story. The main character, the irrepressible Lily Alouette, is also fictional. The daughter of French street acrobats who die while trying their luck in the Australian goldfields, she finds a new family when she joins a travelling circus.
Lily is a performer to her very bones. She trains as a bareback artiste and adores her new life entertaining wide-eyed audiences. But when the circus travels to New Zealand, disaster strikes - a horse spooks and Lily falls from its back, breaking her ankle.
Misfortune leads to a new opportunity, as a stage performer and singer, and it also propels Lily into the arms of a man, handsome young groom Jack Lacey.