When all is said and done this is a strange little story. It is two
stories in one; first that of the past where Sir John Franklin is
the Lieutenant-Governor with Lady Jane Franklin of Van Diemen's
Land (currently Tasmania, Australia) and how they come to 'adopt' a
little Aborigine girl to prove that a savage can be civilized. Then
there is the story of the future, one where Lady Jane, whose
husband has now been missing for 9 nine years and she beseeches
Charles Dickens to write an article squashing the horrible rumours
of cannibalism among her husbands' last crew. This he does but the
story does not centre on that but on the relationship between
himself and Ellen Ternan.
The story set in the past of Sir John, Lady Jane and Mathinna, the
little black girl, is very absorbing and could have been a book
itself without the other half of the 'future' plot. What Lady Jane
did from the goodness of her heart turned against all those
concerned and became a tragedy. The added story of Dickens really
felt out of place here; it's only connection to the other story is
that Lady Jane appears at the beginning and at the end, plus the
plot revolves around the time when Charles Dickens and Wilkie
Collins were putting on their play, No Frozen Deep, concerning a
melodramatic love story set on an Arctic exploration. I can't say I
enjoyed this second part of the story at all, it seemed pointless
to the plot.
The book is told in chapters which suddenly switch back and forth
from one plot to another going from the past to the future willy
nilly, which creates a somewhat dizzying affect to the reader until
one has settled down into the style. The writing is good, the story
is fast-paced and easy to read and certainly a page-turner during
the Mathinna scenes.
But ultimately the theme of this book is not the plot but that of
the title, "wanting". Everyone in this story is wanting love. Sir
John wants the love of a woman as Lady Jane makes it known early in
the marriage that she finds wifely duties distasteful. Lady Jane
wants maternal love, though she succumbs to her wifely duties at
such times as necessary she is rewarded with being barren. Mathinna
wants the love of belonging. She is a black who acts too white to
be accepted by the blacks and feels the thoughts of a white but of
course is black and will not be accepted by the whites . Then we
have Charles Dickens who desperately wants the love of Ellen. A
young, coquette who, in this book, is the first person to ever
truly understand him. In truth their relationship has never really
been firmly decided one way or the other.
An interesting, quick read but I found the whole Charles Dickens
aspect of the story to be irrelevant to the plot and could have
been left out entirely to leave a much more satisfying story of the
Franklins' "experiment' in raising Mathinna and the tragedy it
became.