Lord John and the hand of devils [electronic resource] / Diana Gabaldon.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780385674713 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 0385674716 (electronic bk.)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource
- Publisher: [Toronto] : Doubleday Canada, 2011.
Content descriptions
- Source of Description Note:
- Description based on eBook information screen.
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- Subject:
- Nobility > England > Fiction.
Seven Years' War, 1756-1763 > Fiction. - Genre:
- Electronic books.
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Electronic resources
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2007 November #1
Gabaldon continues her series featuring the eighteenth-century nobleman and soldier Lord John Grey in this trio of two previously published novellas and one brand-new tale. In "Lord John and the Hellfire Club," Grey's promise to avenge the murder of a fellow regimental soldier's cousin leads him to a dangerous club in the English countryside. While serving in Germany as an English liaison to a company of Hanoverians, Grey finds himself investigating the death of a soldier by a demon in "Lord John and the Succubus." In "Lord John and the Haunted Soldier," an official inquiry into cannon explosions on the battlefield sends Grey to Sussex and a group of powder mill owners, including Grey's own half brother, Edgar DeVane. In sum, a captivating collection of tales featuring richly detailed historical settings, splendidly nuanced characters, and expertly crafted plots rendered extra suspenseful by the clever use of supernatural elements. Copyright 2007 Booklist Reviews. - Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2007 September #2
A secondary character from Gabaldon's Outlander series steps out in three supernatural yarns.Conflicted raconteur Lord John Grey, last seen in Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade (2007), is back. This triptych includes two stories culled from historical anthologies and one original tale published here for the first time. Gabaldon's strengths are on full display. The short form forces her to curtail the sprawl evident in the recent Outlander novels, while the historical backdrop serves to showcase her exhaustive research. With his unrequited passion for the Scottish rebel Jamie Fraser still fresh in his mind, Grey stumbles into a secret society hidden in London in "Lord John and the Hellfire Club." Temptation, blackmail and murder ensue as Grey negotiates the minefields of the British class system. An old-fashioned ghost story lies at the heart of "Lord John and the Succubus," a companion story to the Prussia-set Brotherhood of the Blade. In the midst of the Seven Years' War, Grey must establish the connection between a murdered soldier and a towering gypsy temptress with a secret worth keeping. The last story, "Lord John and the Haunted Soldier," cagily incorporates a thrilling bit of detective work as the noble major ferrets out a traitorous cannoneer among a Royal Artillery Regiment. This last story is the freshest and most thorough portrait of Gabaldon's multifaceted leading man, so troubled by the events that overtake him. "God knows I am neither ignorant nor innocent of the ways of the world. And yet I feel so unclean, so much evil I have met tonight," he writes. Deftly written, pleasantly concise stories about the ghosts of desire, each with its own discrete merits. Copyright Kirkus 2007 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2007 September #2
The indefatigable Gabaldon, who has made the British 18th century her own, offers a trio of novellas about Lord John Grey, whose minor role in the Outlander novels (concerning Jacobite Jamie Fraser and including A Breath of Snow and Ashes ) has become a major fictional spinoff (Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade , etc.). The three mystery-adventure novellas of this volume span 1756 to 1758, in settings packed with dark secretsâand therefore dangersâfor the soldier-hero with secrets of his own. The first novella finds Lord John swearing vengeance in London for a murdered government official, leading him to a deconsecrated abbey where members of the political elite indulge their basest desires. The second pits Lord John against a succubus that plagues his Prussian encampment, and combines humor with military strategy and supernatural myth. The third, most complex narrative finds Lord John investigating the cause of a cannon explosion in the English countryside that results in a fellow officer's death. Gabaldon brings an effusive joy to her fiction that proves infectious even for readers unfamiliar with her work or the period. A foreword and introductory notes add background on the book's evolution. (Nov.)
[Page 39]. Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.