Book description
The Victorian age is often held up as a shining era of British
history, a time of wealth and power, of civilisation and philanthropy.
It was all of these. Yet it was also a time of cruelty and depravity,
where power and wealth were too-often used for ill-purpose and
exploitation. It was the time of the 'Defloration Mania', where young
girls were bought and sold like the slaves they became. Elizabeth
Wilson is an elderly woman who has spent a lifetime of grinding toil
and poverty in a workhouse. She fled there as a young girl, pregnant
and penniless, to escape her depraved uncle and his powerful friends.
However, advancing dementia has caused her to regress inexorably back
in her life, to the point where she is once again re-living the
hellish memories of her life as an orphaned child. [NP] 'The Eighth
Circle of Hell' is a bleak study of the stark contrast between the
polite, strictly ordered society of the Victorian age, and the utter
depravity and exploitation of the vulnerable it shielded. This story
demonstrates how in the furnace of shared adversity, enmities and
friendships can be forged that will last a lifetime, and which are
more enduring than the boundaries of life and death.