The Girl Who Couldnt Read
By (Author) John Harding
HarperCollins Publishers
The Borough Press
23rd March 2015
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Thriller / suspense fiction
823.92
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
220g
A sinister Gothic tale in the tradition of The Woman in Black and The Fall of the House of Usher
New England, The 1890s
When a young doctor begins work at an isolated mental asylum, he is expected to fall in with the shocking regime for treating the patients. He is soon intrigued by one patient, a strange amnesiac girl who is fascinated by books but cannot read. He embarks upon a desperate experiment to save her but when his own dark past begins to catch up with him, he realises it is she who is his only hope of escape.
In this chilling literary thriller from a master storyteller, everyone has something to hide and no one is what they seem.
Plentiful mysteries and good old-fashioned shocks punctuate this pacy and satisfyingly twisting coda DAILY MAIL
Praise for Florence and Giles:
A darkly glamorous tour de force
DAILY MAIL
'Harding rings enough ingenious changes on James's study of perversity to produce his own full-blown Gothic horror tale' INDEPENDENT
An elegant literary exercise worked out with the strictness of a fugue: imagine Henry Jamess The Turn of the Screw reworked by Edgar Allan Poe THE TIMES
John Harding is a sports writer and an expert on the history of the Football Association. He has written extensively on boxing and football, and his book 'Living to Play' (1861055609), also by Robson, is a study of the development of the professional footballer over the past 125 years.