Harriet Baxter is the somewhat unreliable and not always likable narrator of this tale. One family and one terrible tragedy became the focus of her otherwise uneventful (or was it?) life. Harriet, an elderly woman living with a carer in a Bloomsbury apartment, tells the story of Scottish artist Ned Gillespie, whom she describes as her soul mate and one with whom she had a powerful connection. We learn very early that Ned did not achieve the fame she felt he was worthy of because of a terrible personal loss that led to his destroying his paintings and his own life.
Young Harriet Baxter is a well-heeled English spinster. She is in the unusual position of being financially independent and unmarried. Her mother died when she was a child and she has only a tenuous connection with her stepfather. Solitary Harriet met Ned Gillespie at an exhibition and was immediately drawn to one of his paintings and he gentlemanly demeanor. Chance seemed to draw her back to him at the Glasgow International Exhibition in 1888. At the Exhibition, Harriet came upon an unconscious woman, and coming to her aid, found that she was choking on her false teeth. Harriet rescued her from this ignoble end and was pleased to learn that the woman was Ned Gillespie’s mother and this brought her once again into his company.
Gillespie and I has two story lines – one in “present day” 1933 where we see an increasingly paranoid, confused, and perhaps alcoholic Harriet leading what she portrays to be a genteel and academic life recounting those dark days in Glasgow – and the other describes the trial and its aftermath. Can we trust Harriet? For a time you believe that you can . Although you feel sorry for her loneliness, it’s hard to like her as she so obviously covets Ned and is jealous of his relationships. How far would she go? Is she a monster, or is she merely a lonely woman ingratiating herself with someone else’s family? Gillespie and I is a haunting story that is so suspenseful you are propelled through its 500 pages so rapidly you are in danger of missing Harriet’s “by the way” comments that make chilling sense at the end.
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2012/04/staff-pick-gillespie-and-i-by-jane.html