Headstrong
and independent, Rita Saunders is a warm and colourful character, a successful
hairdresser by day and a busy brothel madam by night. The only thing missing
from her life is the love of a good woman.
Istvan
Ziegler is a Hungarian immigrant who has come to New Zealand full of
anticipation to work on the new harbour bridge. His hopes and
dreams become temporarily dashed when he comes up against 1950s NZ, where
foreigners rarely gained entry to 'the club'.
The title 'The Gentlemen's
Club' plays with the idea that respectability can be just a veneer, while
suggesting that Rita’s brothel, and Rita herself, have a
level of respectability they couldn’t claim for themselves.
With its carefully built historical setting, brilliantly
realised characters and psychological plot, The Gentlemen’s Club is reminiscent of Sarah Waters’ writing.
About the author
Jen Shieff was an analyst for several government departments, writing
reports for ministers of the Crown. In 2014, she decided to stop thinking about
writing fiction one day – and do it. The Gentlemen’s Club is Jen’s debut
novel, and she envisages it as the first in a crime fiction series set in
Auckland between 1957 and 2017.
In
writing The Gentlemen’s Club, Jen says she was influenced by Auckland’s
famous madam Flora MacKenzie. ‘Flora appealed to me because of her
independence, her outsider status, the waves she caused and her ability to
survive slings and arrows. She, like my character Rita, had an unfailing
belief in the value of the work she and her girls did and probably knew, decades
before NZ’s parliament did, that it shouldn’t have been considered a crime.
‘In
doing research for the book, I discovered that Flora left her landmark property
in Ring Terrace, St Mary’s Bay, to the man who delivered her whisky. When I
could find no public record of him, I invented him as Istvan Ziegler.’
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