William Keeling, Belle Nash and the Bath Souffle (Envelope Books 2022)
It’s 1831 in Bath, and Mrs Gaia Champion cook’s soufflé has collapsed. Belle is tying his cravat in preparation for the party, while his ‘cousin’ Gerhardt can’t take his eyes away from his own beautiful image in the mirror.
Councillor Belle Nash of Gay Street is openly a ‘bachelor’. He joins forces with the astute widowed Gaia to upset the status quo.
The soufflé failure reveals a conspiracy of political corruption, and the crew set off on a madcap and often nonsensical investigation. The substandard grocer Hezekiah Porter and the dastardly Magistrate Wood are up to something. Mrs Crust’s Pie Shop and the decidedly inferior Shirley Haytit’s tearoom become the spots for a stake-out. Add to the mix Molly Jenkins’ house of ill repute, some deadly crumpets and a royal pronouncement by Princess Victoria, and the day is saved. The soufflés of Bath will rise again.
Satirical fun is poked at the social mores of 1830s Bath, and the characters are witty—the snooty Lady Passmore, who wouldn’t deign to arrive before lesser mortals; Gerhardt, who insists on wearing a wig, speaks English using German syntax and has an interest in regression therapy; Miss Prim, who takes her knitting everywhere she goes; Mr Quigley, who wears a tea cosy for a hat; the beautiful young clerk Lucius Lush—joined by a gaggle of amusing cooks, maids and butlers.
The very idea of setting the failure of a soufflé as the inciting incident is genius. The writing is lush. The humour is educated, witty rather than ha-ha, peppered with clever puns and literary and historical references. It has an old-fashioned feel to it, serving to bring the reader right into the period.
This hilarious Regency satire is Book 1 of the Gay Street Chronicles. I can’t wait for the next.
This review first appeared in Historical Novels Review.









