These two fascinating novellas, like A. S. Byatt's Booker Prize-winning
novel Possession, are set in the mid-nineteenth century, weaving fact
and fiction, reality and romance. "Morpho Eugenia" is a lively Gothic
fable of the Earthly Paradise, of the Victorian obsession with Darwinian
theories of breeding and sexuality and the parallels between insect and
human society - the capture and taming of nature, whether it be a young
woman in a country house or a rare butterfly, gleaming in the forests of
the Amazon. "The Conjugial Angel" concerns Tennyson's In Memoriam,
published in 1850, mourning the death seventeen years before of his
friend Arthur Henry Hallam, who was engaged to Tennyson's sister Emily.
A philosophical ghost story, bizarre, comic, and moving, in which
fictive mediums meet "real" characters, it explores the contemporary
preoccupation with God and life after death. Resonant, magical, entirely
original, this is A. S. Bryant at her best.