"White Stone Day", the second novel revolving around the exploits of derelict journalist Edmund Whitty, turns out to be just as entertaining as its predecessor "The Fiend in Human": once more, MacLachlan Gray combines humour, suspense and detailed descriptions of the vilest aspects of Victorian society into a /5(15). · If you favor Victorian thrillers, White Stone Day, by John MacLachian Gray is a perfect one: believable historic setting, endearing but flawed protagonist, numerous, fiendish predators and spunky, innocent young girls. Oblique references to Alice, Wonderland and Lewis Carroll aka Charles Lutwidge Dodgson abound/5. · John MacLachlan Gray, who evoked "the mean streets and byways of London with a skill worthy of Dickens" (Publishers Weekly) in The Fiend in Human, spins an even more irresistible tale of dark secrets behind the facade of Victorian respectability in .
NOT QUITE DEAD ALSO BY John MacLachlan Gray. The Fiend in Human White Stone Day. John MacLachlan Gray. NOT QUITE DEAD St. Martin's Minotaur NEW YORK This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. This rich fictionalized take on the real-life murder of Scottish nanny Janet Smith, one of Vancouver's most famous cold cases, is another feather in the cap of MacLachlan Gray (Not Quite Dead. If you favor Victorian thrillers, White Stone Day, by John MacLachian Gray is a perfect one: believable historic setting, endearing but flawed protagonist, numerous, fiendish predators and spunky, innocent young girls. Oblique references to Alice, Wonderland and Lewis Carroll aka Charles Lutwidge Dodgson abound.
White Stone Day by John MacLachlan Gray starting at $ White Stone Day has 4 available editions to buy at Half Price Books Marketplace. John MacLachlan Gray, who evoked "the mean streets and byways of London with a skill worthy of Dickens" (Publishers Weekly) in The Fiend in Human, spins an even more irresistible tale of dark secrets behind the facade of Victorian respectability. John MacLachlan Gray, who evoked "the mean streets and byways of London with a skill worthy of Dickens" (Publishers Weekly) in The Fiend in Human, spins an even more irresistible tale of dark secrets behind the facade of Victorian respectability in White Stone Day.
0コメント