In my city our county prison looks like a castle. Supposedly the huge stones in its structure were used as ballast in the many English ships used to travel to Colonial America. Some might smile when they hear the pun: "A man's home is his castle," but no modern jail or ones
…more like Marshalsea in 17th century London are places of joy to their inhabitants.
When we meet Thomas Hawkins, estranged son of a well-to-do vicar, we know he is headed for trouble, which is Marshalsea Gaol and Court Palace and its head keeper William Acton. Defiant, reckless, and heavily in debt, Hawkins wins at a card game that will temporarily get his creditors off his back, but on his way home he is lured by a link boy into the hands of robbers. Beaten and robbed his landlord turns him over to Jakes, a warrant officer, who escorts him to Marshalsea and the five days of hell that follow.
When asked by one of the characters what he does, Hawkins flippantly replies, "I am a gentleman, as little as possible." However, in his five days at Marshalsea he endures a lot. He is beaten, left for dead in The Strong Room with the deceased bodies of prisoners whose relatives do not have the money to claim the bodies, falls in love, loses a friend, and solves a murder that has plagued the King's Marshal, Sir Philip Meadows.
The reader is faced with the horrid conditions of debtors' prisons where everything is for sale. Marshalsea has two parts: The Masters Side and The Common Side. Luckily for Tom, he is thrown in the Masters Side because Samuel Fleet his roommate and fellow scoundrel
has offered him free room and board. For the first twenty-four hours it doesn't seem too bad. It has a pub, a restaurant, and prisoners have freedom of movement during daylight hours.
Tom's penchant for finding trouble or it finding him happens fast. Hodson's well-researched storyline offers an array of characters. She keeps the reader guessing the identity of the murderer; and when the last page is finished it screams, "Tom is most certainly returning to let readers know what trouble he finds next." At least I hope she writes a sequel. (less)