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Review: The rich are different -- and awful -- in 'The Infamous Gilberts'

Chris Hewitt, The Minnesota Star Tribune on

Published in Books News

There may be more style than substance in “The Infamous Gilberts” but it is very stylish, indeed.

I kept thinking of Shirley Jackson when I read Angela Tomaski’s debut novel because Jackson wrote both amusingly macabre books about families (“Life Among the Savages”) and darker works that hinted that the cracks in crumbling Gothic mansions sometimes represent the moral failings of the people who live in them (“The Haunting of Hill House”). “The Infamous Gilberts” does a bit of both of those things.

Tomaski traces the Gilberts from the 1940s to the 2000s, although both the book’s language and the Gilberts’ house seem to date to about a century earlier, around the time of “Jane Eyre.” There’s an absent father and a clueless, neglectful mother but the five Gilbert children — Lydia, Hugo, Annabel, Jeremy and Rosalind — are essentially raising themselves in an English country house of secret passages and worrying infestations.

“Gilberts” is partly structured as a tour of the now-deserted mansion, which is called Thornwalk and which is going to be converted into a hotel. A mysterious narrator, about whom all we know is that he is named Max, leads us from room to room, pointing out trinkets left by family members, damage inflicted during fights and blood left in ominous circumstances.

As anyone who has ever toured an inexpertly staged home-for-sale knows, you can tell a lot about people by the things they leave behind. And it’s fun to speculate about them, even if — as with Thornwalk — there’s no way you’re buying that house.

Going back and forth in time and peeping at the Gilberts, almost as if Thornwalk is a dollhouse and they are dolls posed within it, Max offers a flurry of observations about the children. There’s this, for instance, when he points out an ear-shaped mark worn into a door and observes, “It is not a nice habit, you say, this listening at doors. You are thinking badly of poor little Annabel. But she has her reasons.”

Tomaski is too fond of versions of the phrase “but more of that later,” a tease that can begin to feel monotonous. But she’s adept at hints that, like “she has her reasons,” promise revelations to come.

In the second sentence of “Gilberts,” our narrator announces that it will be about “the downfall of this great family,” once “the subject of much tawdry gossip and many a sensational headline,” and the book delivers on that, with family members stealing from each other, locking one another up and, in the case of poor Annabel, ordering a medical procedure so unspeakable that, well, it’s not spoken of, only hinted at.

 

There’s a disconnect between the cool elegance of Tomaski’s writing and the brutal behavior it describes. Inbred rich people probably have behaved like this down through the ages, but there’s an unreality in “The Infamous Gilberts,” along with a macabre sense of humor, that keeps it entertaining, rather than grim. The more Max calls attention to himself as narrator, the more aware we are that we don’t need to worry about these unfortunate and awful people because they’re just characters in a twisted story.

Max seems reluctant to spill everything. As a result, we don’t get all of their stories — we learn just a tiny bit about Max himself, for instance. But, as the door to Thornwalk is closed for the final time at the end of the book, we’re reminded that every doorway we pass hides a multitude of secrets. And that each one of those secrets leads to many more.

____

The Infamous Gilberts

By: Angela Tomaski.

Publisher: Scribner, 273 pages.


©2026 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit at startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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