THE KEY
A hidden note.
A lost love.
A second chance.
The Key is a novel I received a few months back from Headline Review thanks to a shout out from my fellow book blogger Kate Noble over at https://thequietknitterer.wordpress.com/ I haven’t read a book by Kathryn Hughes before but I have read reviews of her previous novels so I was looking forward to reading The Key. Life and other book commitments resulted in a delay in me getting to it but I am delighted today to finally bring you all my thoughts.
The Key was published on the 6th September 2018 and is described as ‘a powerful, twisting novel that you won’t be able to put down.’
About the Book
1956
It’s Ellen Crosby’s first day at work as a student nurse at Ambergate County Lunatic Asylum. When she meets a young girl committed by her father, and a pioneering physician keen to try out the various ‘cures’ available for mental illness, little does Ellen know that a choice she will make is to change all their lives for ever…2006
Sarah is drawn to the abandoned Ambergate Asylum and whilst exploring the old corridors she discovers a suitcase in an attic belonging to a female patient who was admitted to the asylum fifty years earlier. The shocking contents of the suitcase lead Sarah to unravel a forgotten story of tragedy, lost love and an old wrong that only Sarah may have the power to put right.
My Review:
The Key is a fictional novel but is inspired by Kathryn Hughes visit to Denbigh Asylum in North Wales. ‘Known by locals as simply, The Mental, it housed over 1,500 patients at its peak. It’s a vast building situated in acres of lush Welsh countryside with panoramic views of the mountains of Snowdonia.’
After Kathryn Hughes wandered around the derelict building she wrote ‘there was an eerie atmosphere, one of immense sadness and despair. If only walls could talk, I thought.’
Combined with the additional research she garnered through a trip to The National Sound Archives at the British Library in London, Kathryn Hughes created her fictional mental hospital, Ambergate Asylum.
‘Stories of Electroconvulsive Therapy, lobotomies, insulin coma therapy and patients incarcerated for almost the whole of their lives because they were deemed difficult or were a nuisance to their families. A diagnosis of ‘feeble-minded’ was enough to consign someone to an asylum indefinitely.
The patients I write about in The Key are all entirely fictional, but their stories mirror those of the patients who were actually there but never permitted to have a voice until now.’ (Full post ~ Inside The Walls of the Asylum )The Key is a dual timeline story as we are taken back to a day in 1956 when Ellen Crosby arrived at Ambergate County Lunatic Asylum as a student nurse reporting for her first day of duty. Ellen is quite shocked by some of the methods used by the medical staff on the residents of the hospital. The treatment seems quite Dickensian to Ellen and she begins to wonder about what she has let herself in for. With no formal training, Ellen is to learn on the job but the cold-front of mental health care in the 1950s is an eye-opener to Ellen.
Ellen becomes especially fixated on one resident, a young girl of a similar age to Ellen, who is committed by her father. Ellen is unable to see what is wrong with this girl and is openly concerned about the manner in which she is handled. There is a doctor who is working on methods to assist the people under his care but Ellen is not 100% sure that his methods are humane. As time passes Ellen makes a decision that will have a huge impact on the lives of others in future years.
Fifty years later and Sarah is fascinated by the now abandoned Ambergate Asylum near her home. Working in the local library gives Sarah access to carrying out research for a book she is writing about the hospital, but for Sarah, the only real research comes from exploring the premises. Her mother has recently passed away and Sarah is living with her Dad for the time being. He is not happy with Sarah’s investigation into Ambergate and advises her to leave the past alone but Sarah is unable to do this.
As she searches the corridors of the old building she finds a room full of suitcases, the remaining memories of past residents. Sarah searches each case, recording their content for her research but in one she happens upon a devastating piece of information that takes her breath away.
Sarah becomes obsessed with unearthing the truth behind these tragic events, leading her down a very unexpected and quite distressing path, but yet one that will expose the truth and will hopefully put right a terrible wrong carried out at Ambergate over fifty years ago.
‘Turn The Key and unlock the past….’
This is exactly what Sarah does as the past and the present become intertwined in this story of a young woman who’s actions would unwittingly affect her future and that of others for over half a century.
Kathryn Hughes writes beautifully. The narrative just flows as you find yourself getting so caught up in the story. We all have heard the stories of the old institutions and how folk were left in these places and forgotten about for years, many times only leaving in a coffin. Thankfully the attitude to mental health has made huge advances over the years but we must always remember that it wasn’t that long ago when life in these places was a traumatic experience for most involved.
The Key is a compelling and fascinating read, one that will stay with you long after you turn that final page.
I’ll leave you with Lesley Pearse’s words ‘A wonderful, enthralling story; one that I didn’t want to end’
Purchase Link ~ The Key
Bio
Kathryn Hughes was born in Altrincham, near Manchester. After completing a secretarial course, Kathryn met her husband and they married in Canada. For twenty-nine years they ran a business together, raised two children and travelled when they could to places such as India, Singapore, South Africa and New Zealand. Kathryn and her family now make their home in a village near Manchester. Her first novel, The Letter, was a digital #1 and international bestseller, and her second novel The Secret has been highly acclaimed.
The Key is Kathryn Hughes’ third novel.
Website ~ https://kathrynhughesauthor.com/
Twitter ~ @KHughesAuthor
Great review! This sounds like a fascinating read.
Thank you!