Pages: 784 (Paperback) ISBN: 019283388X Pub: Oxford Paperbacks Pub date: 1998-03-05 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 21043
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Reader Reviews:Page turner but cop-out ending (0/0 people found this helpful)I was amazed at how quickly I whizzed thorough this novel's 610 pages. Wilkie Collins' style is much easier to read than Dickens' and his characters appear far more believable.
Thank you to those who wrote good reviews (1/2 people found this helpful)I bought it because of the good reviews the book had and also because at times it is nice to read quality prose of the Victorian era. Those who say this is as good or maybe better than the Woman in white are totally right. It is a very modern book in the way that it describes the frustrated feelings of a very young woman who finds herself and her sister cheated out of a legacy, and who is determined not to take it lying down. An unusual decision for a female of the period and one that makes the book well worth reading.The unsavoury captain Wragge who is going to help her regain what she sees as her rightful inheritance is certainly one of the best crooks and swindlers ever drawn in a book. It is a challenge to make such a wretch appealing to the reader.
Wonderfully Refreshing (0/0 people found this helpful)I love all of this author's "big 4" books, but this is my favourite. The heroine is so refreshingly different from most Victorian women in novels and would not look out of place in our time. An antidote to Laura in "The Woman In White". With an exciting plot and intriguing characters, this book is a must-read. Marvellous (2/3 people found this helpful)This is an excellent book - I agree with all the other reviewers apart from one thing - I thought the happy ending was too contrived, but as that only took 2 pages out of 600, I'm not worried! An easy yet exciting book to read, which kept my interest all the way. Unusual, gripping and fascinating - read this book! (10/13 people found this helpful)This is a very good book - if you enjoy a leisurely stroll through the past with an excellent cast of characters and a cracking good plot. Collins was a champion of the under-dog in a much less sentimental way than his friend, Dickens, and in this story he takes on the establishment over the laws on illegitimacy and inheritance. The heroines are disinherited through no fault of their own - and Collins clearly disapproves of visiting the crime of the parents on to innocent children. The older sister accepts her fate and sets out to earn her living, the younger sister does the opposite. Similar ProductsArmadale (Penguin Classics) The Dead Secret (Oxford World's Classics) The Woman in White (Penguin Popular Classics) Lady Audley's Secret (Wordsworth Classics) Man and Wife (Oxford World's Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Crime, Thrillers & Mystery -> Authors, A-Z -> C -> Collins, Wilkie
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