Hot Stew

On a nondescript block in London's Soho district stands a 17th-century building with a decades-old French restaurant on the ground floor. The specialty of the house is snails in garlic butter. On the rooftop, two women bicker and smoke. In the cellar, an encampment of squatters scrapes out a home. On the middle floors, sex workers entertain clients in apartments where some of them also live. Myriad and motley, these characters and their sordid and sympathetic lives form Hot Stew, a compelling, compassionate novel by Fiona Mozley (Elmet).

Precious is an immigrant mother and grandmother. "Everyone assumes 'Precious' is the name she adopted on entering the trade," but it's her real name. She shares her apartment with her maid and life partner, Tabitha, retired from the trade. One of the brothel's customers, Robert, an older man retired from a life of crime, drinks at a nearby pub with his friend Lorenzo, a young actor. The pub is also frequented by two of the cellar squatters: a man who does magic tricks and a woman with a heroin problem and a mysterious past. A young man of wealth and privilege reconsiders old connections as he explores the Soho building that ties them all together. Looming dangerously over all their lives is the formidable Agatha Howard, who owns the building and wants to gut it for renovations to increase her profits.

Hot Stew is concerned with class, history, legacies, how each person ends up where they do and the degree to which they can determine their own futures. This is a novel of empathy, shared histories and hope in the most unlikely of places. --Julia Kastner, librarian and blogger at pagesofjulia

Powered by: Xtenit