|
Under the hypnotic influence of the evil Baron R**
illustration from The Notting Hill Mystery |
Just read this
great article in The Guardian announcing the reissue of
The Notting Hill Mystery (1863), an excellent Victorian sensation novel of crime and the supernatural that has been called by genre historian and crime writer Julian Symons "the first detective novel." The book caused a minor sensation over at Mystery*File where I
reviewed the novel back in December 2010 and then a few weeks later Paul Collins dogged investigative work turned up the long hidden true identity of the novel's author who had been hiding behind the pseudonym "Charles Felix" for centuries.
Collins' article was published in the
New York Times in January 2011. My review of the book was linked to the Wikipedia article on
The Notting Hill Mystery three days after the Collins article appeared.
The new issue published by The British Library includes the original illustrations (including the one pictured above) by Georges Du Maurier (writer, artist, and grandfather of Daphne) that accompanied the first publication of the novel when it was serialized in
Once a Week magazine starting on Nov. 29, 1862. The book also includes an introduction by Mike Ashley, who has done great work for Ash-Tree Press, Midnight House and other independent publishers.
Very excited about this. I'm ordering my copy pronto. You can too by clicking
here.
Thanks to the gang at
Shotsmag Confidential for the link to the article.
Thanks for the heads-up on this, John. I've ordered the book, too, and I'm really looking forward to it.
ReplyDelete