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Вайн Барбара (5)

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Пятьдесят оттенков темноты

Вайн Барбара

Пятьдесят оттенков темноты

Вайн Барбара
Пятьдесят оттенков темноты

Вера Хильярд совершила ужасное преступление — и должна быть сурово наказана. Ее приговорили к казни через повешение — одну из последних англичанок за всю историю страны. А за сухими строками приговора потерялась печальная история обычной домохозяйки, которую все знали как благонравную и безобидную женщину. Но никто даже представить не мог, какую страшную семейную тайну долгие годы хранила Вера в самом дальнем и темном углу своей памяти. И чтобы скрыть эту тайну от окружающих, она была готова на все — даже на жестокое убийство. И на собственную смерть…

Барбара Вайн — псевдоним знаменитой «баронессы детектива» Рут Ренделл. С тех пор как в 1964 г. вышел в свет ее первый роман, она удостоилась множества наград, в числе которых: «Золотой кинжал» Ассоциации британских авторов детективов за лучший детективный роман (1976, 1986, 1987), «Бриллиантовый кинжал» за вклад в развитие жанра (1991), британская Национальная книжная премия Совета по искусствам в жанре художественной литературы (1980), три премии Эдгара Аллана По Ассоциации американских авторов мистических триллеров и др. В 1996 г. она стала кавалером ордена Британской империи, а в 1997 г. — баронессой и пожизненным пэром. Ее книги переведены на двадцать пять языков.

The Blood Doctor

Вайн Барбара

The Blood Doctor

Вайн Барбара
The Blood Doctor

Sometimes it’s best to leave the past alone. For when biographer Martin Nanther looks into the life of his famous great-grandfather Henry, Queen Victoria’s favorite physician, he discovers some rather unsettling coincidences, like the fact that the doctor married the sister of his recently murdered fiancée. The more Martin researches his distant relative, the more fascinated—and horrified—he becomes. Why did people have a habit of dying around his great grandfather? And what did his late daughter mean when she wrote that he’s done “monstrous, quite appalling things”?

Barbara Vine (a.k.a. Ruth Rendell) deftly weaves this story of an eminent Victorian with a modern yarn about the embattled biographer, who is watching the House of Lords prepare to annul membership for hereditary peers and thus strip him of his position. Themes of fate and family snake throughout this teasing psychological suspense, a typically chilling tale from a master of the genre.

From Publishers Weekly

This rich, labyrinthine book by Vine (aka Ruth Rendell) concerns a "mystery in history," like her 1998 novel, The Chimney Sweeper's Boy. Martin Nanther-biographer and member of the House of Lords-discovers some blighted roots on his family tree while researching the life of his great-great-grandfather, Henry, an expert on hemophilia and physician to Queen Victoria. Martin contacts long-lost relatives who help him uncover some puzzling events in Henry's life. Was Henry a dour workaholic or something much more sinister? Vine can make century-old tragedy come alive. Still, the decades lapsed between Martin's and Henry's circles create added emotional distance, and, because they are all at least 50 years dead, we never meet Henry or his cohorts except through diaries and letters. Martin's own life-his wife's infertility and troubles with a son from his first marriage-is interesting yet sometimes intrudes on the more intriguing Victorian saga. Vine uses her own experience as a peer to give readers an insider's look into the House of Lords, at the dukes snoozing in the library between votes and eating strawberries on the terrace fronting the Thames. Some minor characters are especially vivid, like Martin's elderly cousin Veronica, who belts back gin while stonewalling about the family skeletons all but dancing through her living room. Readers may guess Henry's game before Vine is ready to reveal it, but this doesn't detract from this novel peopled by characters at once repellant and compelling.

From Library Journal

In her tenth novel writing as Barbara Vine, Ruth Rendell offers a novel of suspense based in 19th-century England and centering on deceit, murder, and various other family skeletons. Martin Nanther, the fourth Lord Nanther, has a comfortable life in present-day London as a Hereditary Peer in the House of Lords and as a historical biographer. He chooses as his most recent subject his own great-grandfather, the first Lord Nanther, physician to the royal family (Victoria and Albert) and an early noted researcher into the cause and transmission of hemophilia. The reader is taken through the family history as Martin painstakingly uncovers some not so savory bits of his own family's past. The story is dense with characters, and the author provides family trees of the two principal families, for which any reader will be eternally grateful. The story lacks the usual page-turner suspense of the Rendell/Vine novels but makes up for that with unusually detailed glimpses into Victorian life and the inner workings of the House of Parliament, which American readers will find particularly intriguing. Recommended for all public libraries. Caroline Mann, Univ. of Portland, OR