The Glass of Time
Building on his "superb" (Washington Post) debut, The Meaning of Night, Michael Cox returns to a murderous nineteenth-century England.Like its "beguiling" and "intelligent" (New York Times Book Review) predecessor, The Glass of Time is a page...
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Building on his "superb" (Washington Post) debut, The Meaning of Night, Michael Cox returns to a murderous nineteenth-century England.Like its "beguiling" and "intelligent" (New York Times Book Review) predecessor, The Glass of Time is a page turning period mystery about identity, the nature of secrets, and what happens when past obsessions impose themselves on an unwilling present. In the autumn of 1876, nineteen year-old orphan Esperanza Gorst arrives at the great country house of Evenwood to become a lady's maid to the twenty-sixth Baroness Tansor. But Esperanza is no ordinary servant. She has been sent by her guardian, the mysterious Madame de l'Orme, to uncover the secrets that her new mistress has sought to conceal, and to set right a past injustice in which Esperanza's own life is bound up. At Evenwood she meets Lady Tansor's two dashing sons, Perseus and Randolph, and finds herself enmeshed in a complicated web of seduction, intrigue, deceit, betrayal, and murder. Few writers are as gifted at evoking the sensibility of the nineteenth century as Michael Cox, who has made the world of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins his own.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780393067736 (0393067734)
Publish date: October 17th 2008
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Pages no: 592
Edition language: English
Category:
European Literature,
British Literature,
Book Club,
Historical Fiction,
Mystery,
Historical Mystery,
Thriller,
Mystery Thriller,
Suspense,
Gothic,
Victoriana
Series: The Meaning of Night (#2)
I read The Meaning of Night some time ago, and although I quite enjoyed it it hasn't stuck in my memory. This follow-up novel was far more up my street. It's a good old-fashioned murder/blackmail mystery in the Wilkie Collins tradition (clearly intended, as Collins is referenced many times), but unf...
Like The Meaning of Night, its predecessor, The Glass of Time is a page turning period mystery about identity, the nature of secrets, and what happens when past obsessions impose themselves on an unwilling present.In the autumn of 1876, nineteen year-old orphan Esperanza Gorst arrives at the great c...
4+ starsIt's tough to categorize this book, because it's such a full story... and it's a story full of twists, mysteries, revelations, and even some romance. I did *not* read "The Meaning of Night" first; I had no idea or indication that "The Glass of Time" was, in any way, a sequel to that book. I'...
There is something about the redeemable bad guy, or more accurately, there is something about certain bad guys that make people want to redeem them. Usually, it fails in terms of the story. The bad guy becomes too saint like or something else.Take the three Star Wars prequels, for instance (aka th...
I loved, loved the creepiness of this book. I thought it did go into periods where it was incredibly dry so it is def. a 3 star book. This is an author that I continue to check out from time to time.