This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress, Blogspot & Librarything by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission
Title: No Thoroughfare
Series: ----------
Author: Charles Dickens & Wilkie Collins
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Classic
Pages: 256
Format: Digital Edition
Series: ----------
Author: Charles Dickens & Wilkie Collins
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Classic
Pages: 256
Format: Digital Edition
The synopsis will have some real
spoilers, so if you think you might ever read this book and don't
want it spoiled, just read the “My Thoughts” portion.
Synopsis: Spoilers |
A baby boy is given
to an Foundling and in his teen years is adopted by an older lady.
She educates him and reveals that she is his birth mother. She sets
him on the path of success in the Wine Business and promptly passes
away.
Said young man,
Walter Wilding, is in poor health and so takes on a partner to help
with the business, one George Vendale. Walter also hires a new
housekeeper and in the process it is revealed that she was a former
nurse at the Foundling. It is also revealed that there were several
“Walter Wilding”s and the lady got the wrong one. This distresses
young Wilding to no end and he begins to seek out the rightful heir.
It also places an incredible stress upon his already weak
constitution and he soon passes away. He leaves it to his partner
George to find the heir and if he can't, to take Wilding's share of
the company.
At the same time,
George is woo'ing Margeurite Obenreizer, a young swiss woman who is
under the guardianship of her half-uncle. During this whole thing, it
is revealed by an inquiry of George's that someone in a high position
of trust, has been stealing money from the company that Obenreizer
works for.
George ends up
taking a hike over the Alps to give his evidence and of course it is
Obenreizer, who goes along to try to either steal the evidence or
kill George. Margeurite senses something is wrong, follows with the
help of faithful retainer of George's and saves George only to
apparently have him die in her arms.
Several months
elapse and Obenreizer, now let go from his previous job, is working
for a lawyer with the aim of stealing his secrets and using them for
personal gain. He learns something about Vendale, who he thinks is
dead. Then Margeurite and George spring forth, alive and whole and
reveal the treachery of Obenreizer in full. Obenreizer, thinking he
is getting revenge, reveals that George Vendale is actually adopted
by the Vendales and that he was a foundling. Of course, it turns out
that George Vendale was the heir that Walter Wilding was looking for
the entire time.
The book ends with
Obenreizer dying in an avalanche and George and Margeurite getting
married.
My Thoughts: |
I remembered a few things from my initial read in '03, but in so many
ways it was like reading it for the first time. I enjoyed this a lot.
This was drama of the finest vintage. Orphans and searches for lost
heirs and love and evil villains and love triumphant and just
desserts. This has it all in spades. And it is short, so anyone who
might be intimidated by Dicken's rather lengthy style won't be put
off. I don't have anything else to say. I'm tired and worded out.
★★★★☆