Nights at the Circus

Nights at the Circus is a 1984 novel by English author Angela Carter. A Picaresque, it starts with roving American reporter Jack Walser interviewing aerialist Sophie Fevvers in Victorian London on her amazing (if hard to credit) life story. Left on the doorstep of a brothel, Sophie sprouted wings when she hit puberty. Both because ofa this unusual feature and because she's a woman, there are many who would exploit her.

The rest of the novel follows the crew of a circus that has employed Sophie as an aerialist, and that Jack covers while working undercover as a clown. Further peril and no small amount of personal change await in Tsarist Russia and Siberia.

This work has examples of:

 * Big Beautiful Woman: You might expect a flying woman to be small and sylphlike. In this case, you'd be wrong.
 * Circus of Fear: Not exactly evil, but certainly dangerous.
 * Eagle Land: Jack is a likeable but in some ways painfully naive archetype of the American abroad.
 * Everything's Better with Monkeys
 * Functional Magic
 * Hooker with a Heart of Gold: Sophie's adoptive mother Lizzie
 * Magic Realism
 * Winged Humanoid: Well, yeah.