An automaton, a man and a woman who can never meet, a secret love
story, and the fate of the warming world are all brought to
incandescent life in this hauntingly moving novel from one of the
finest writers of our time.
London 2011, Catherine Gehrig, conservator at the Swinburne
museum, learns of the unexpected death of her colleague and lover of
thirteen years. As the mistress of a married man she has to grieve
in private. One other person knows their secret, the director of the
museum, who arranges for Catherine to be given a special project
away from prying eyes. Mad with grief, the usually controlled and
rational Catherine discovers a series of handwritten notebooks
telling the story of the man who originally commissioned the
extraordinary and eerie automata she has been asked to bring back to life.
With a precocious new assistant, Amanda, at her side, she starts
to piece together both the clockwork puzzle and the story of the
mechanical creature which was commissioned in 19th century Germany
by an English man, Henry Brandling, as a 'magical amusement' for his
consumptive son. Having been asked to leave his home by his wife,
Henry turns his hurtful departure into an adventure that he records
for his young child. But it is Catherine Gehrig, in a strangely
stormy and overheated London nearly two hundred years later, who
will find comfort and wonder in reading Henry's story. And it is the
automata, in its beautiful, uncanny imitation of life, that will
link two strangers confronted with the mysteries of life and death,
the miracle and catastrophe of human invention and the body's
astonishing chemistry of love and feeling.