Available Formats
The Dead Secret: A Novel
By (Author) Wilkie Collins
Skyhorse Publishing
Arcade Publishing
1st April 2015
United States
General
Fiction
823.8
Paperback
376
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
383g
Wilkie Collins was the first great detective novelist. His dark and complex mysteries influenced the work of other writers, such as Anthony Trollope and Charles Dickens, with whom he developed a close personal friendship. Swinburne found his work worthy of serious criticism, and T. S. Eliot credits him even more than Poe with the invention of the modern detective novel and the popular thriller. Before such works asThe Woman in White,The Moonstone,Armadale, andNo Name, Collins demonstrates the full range of his talents for intricate plot and dramatic suspense inThe Dead Secret, one of his earliest novels.
Like much of Collins's work,The Dead Secretexplores the consequences of a single, hidden act. The Cornish mansion Porthgenna harbors the secret of such an act, one that has ruined the life of the servant girl Sarah Leeson. This same secret lies hidden for fifteen years until the heiress to Porthgenna, Rosamund Treverton, returns and exposes it. Her detective work may reveal the truth, but her revelation of a long-forgotten crime could mean disaster for her and the entire estate. Wilkie Collins's brilliant characters, suspenseful plots, and piercing look into Victorian-era society are on full display inThe Dead Secret.
Wilkie Collins was the author of The Moonstone, The Woman in White, and other fiction. He was a contemporary and close friend of Charles Dickens, and his work is as much fun to read today. Often described as a bohemian with unhealthy habits and tendencies toward excess, Collins wrote at least nineteen novels and twelve plays in his lifetime and fathered three children. He died in 1889.