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    The Haunted Hotel: A Mystery Of Modern Venice

    The Haunted Hotel: A Mystery Of Modern Venice

    2.7 6

    by Wilkie Collins


    eBook

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    Customer Reviews

    Wilkie Collins has long been overshadowed by his friend and collaborator Charles Dickens -- unfortunately for readers who have consequently not discovered one of literature's most compelling writers. His novels are ceremonious and none too brief; they are also irresistible. Take the opening lines of his 1852 story of marital deceit, Basil: "What am I now about to write? The history of little more than the events of one year, out of the twenty-four years of my life. Why do I undertake such an employment as this? Perhaps, because I think that my narrative may do good; because I hope that, one day, it may be put to some warning use." It's a typical Collins opening, one that draws the reader in with a tone that's personal, but carries formality and import.

    With his long, frizzy black beard and wide, sloping forehead, Collins looked like a grandfatherly type, even in his 30s. But his thinking and lifestyle were unconventional, even a bit ahead of his time. His characters (particularly the women) have a Henry James–like predilection for bucking social mores, and he occasionally found his work under attack by morality-mongers. Collins was well aware of his books' potential to offend certain Victorian sensibilities, and there is evidence in some of his writings that he was prepared for it, if not welcoming of it. He writes in the preface to Armadale, his 1866 novel about a father's deathbed murder confession, "Estimated by the clap-trap morality of the present day, this may be a very daring book. Judged by the Christian morality which is of all time, it is only a book that is daring enough to speak the truth."

    Collins began his career by writing his painter father's biography. He gained popularity when he began publishing stories and serialized novels in Dickens's publications, Household Words and All the Year Round. His best-known works are The Woman in White and The Moonstone, both of which -- along with Basil -- have been made into films.

    Collins often alludes to fantastic, supernatural happenings in his stories; the events themselves are usually borne out by reasonable explanations. What remains are the electrifying effects one human being can have upon another, for better and for worse. His main characters are often described in terms such as "remarkable," "extraordinary," and "singular," lending their actions -- and thereby the story -- a special urgency. In one of his great successes, 1860's The Woman in White, Collins spins what is basically a magnificent con story into something almost ghostly: The fates of two look-alike women -- a beautiful, well-off woman and a poor insane-asylum escapee -- are intertwined and manipulated by two evil men. One of those is among the best fictional villains ever created, the kill-`em-with-kindness Count Fosco. Fosco is emblematic of another Collins hallmark -- antagonists who manage to throw their victims off guard by some powerful charm of personality or appearance.

    The Moonstone, published in 1868, is regarded by many to be the first English detective novel. Starring the unassuming Sergeant Cuff, it follows the trail of a sought-after yellow diamond from India that has fallen into the wrong hands. Like The Woman in White, the novel is told in multiple first person narratives that display Collins's gift for distinctive and often humorous voices. Whether it is servants, foreigners, or the wealthy, Collins is an equal-opportunity satirist who quietly but deftly pokes fun at human foibles even as he draws nuanced, memorable characters.

    Though The Woman in White and The Moonstone are Collins's standouts, he had a productive, consistent career; the novels Armadale, No Name and Poor Miss Finch are worthwhile reads, and his short stories will particularly appeal to Edgar Allan Poe fans. Fortunately in the case of this underappreciated writer, there are plenty of titles to appreciate.

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    Brief Biography

    Date of Birth:
    December 8, 1824
    Date of Death:
    September 23, 1889
    Place of Birth:
    London, England
    Place of Death:
    London, England
    Education:
    Studied law at Lincoln¿s Inn, London

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    Detective Classics presents you The Haunted Hotel: A Mystery of Modern Venice in a fantastic ebook edition.
     
    Lord Montbarry breaks off his engagement to Agnes Lockwood to marry the Countess Narona.  The couple end a continental tour in Venice where they live reclusively in a large, decaying palace.  They are accompanied by Baron Rivar, brother of the Countess, and by Ferrari, their courier.
     
    Agnes learns from Montbarry’s brother, Henry Westwick, that Mountbarry, whose life was insured for £10,000 in favour of his wife, has died of bronchitis.  The courier has disappeared without trace although Ferrari’s wife receives an anonymous note containing £1,000.  The insurance companies carefully investigate but find no evidence that Mountbarry died other than by natural causes.
     
    The palace is refurbished as a fashionable hotel, and the Westwick family arrange to meet there.  Without realising that they are sleeping in the room where Montbarry died, three of his family separately experience insomnia, nightmares or nauseous smells.  Agnes awakes in the night to see a disembodied head descending from the ceiling.  A real head is discovered the next day decomposing in a secret compartment in the room above.  Henry finds a set of gold false teeth which are later confirmed as Montbarry’s by his dentist.
     
    The Countess has also come to Venice, compelled by Destiny.  She writes a ghost story in the form of a play which is in effect a confession of Montbarry’s murder by herself and the Baron.  Ferrari, dying of bronchitis, had agreed to assume the identity of Montbarry to perpetrate an insurance fraud in exchange for the £1,000 sent to his wife.  Montbarry’s body was disposed of by acid but the head hidden in the secret compartment.  Agnes and Henry return to England and are married privately.  They never discuss details of the confession.

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