Ratings2
Average rating3.5
Set in and around London's Regent's Park, where the city's wealthiest, poorest, kindest, and most vicious citizens all cross paths, The Keys to the Street tells of the deadly thanks a young woman risks receiving in return for an act of selfless generosity.
"Is it true that we dislike those who have done us a service?" asks Mary Jago's grandmother. One of many questions about the best and worst of human nature, it is one with an answer Mary will discover for herself as a consequence of donating her own bone marrow to save the life of a young man she doesn't know. "It's us he's after," says Dill, "our sort." Dill's sort are the homeless who seek refuge in the park, whose corpses have lately been turning up impaled on the spiked railings that surround it.
Mary is not their sort at all and would under ordinary circumstances be separated from such horror by social barriers stronger than iron bars. But she has performed a bold act; it has encouraged her to reject her abusive lover and to believe in the possibility of finding love with a soul as gentle as her own. The circumstances of her life are now extraordinary; she is receptive to previously undreamed of happiness, and vulnerable to the darkest grief.
Reviews with the most likes.
Some mildly messy plotting and a few too many names weren't even to keep this from going down like soup on a cold day. I've been pushing through a lot of personal bleakness the past few days and the Baroness turned out to be just what I needed. Various individuals with varying degrees of grotesqueness whirl about on a block in London. Dogwalkers, con artists, dealers, museum gift shop employees, abusive exes, and a murderer on the loose. Sadness, anger, fear, hope, and connection!