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THE LAKE OF DARKNESS

Author: Rendell
Publisher: HUTCHINSON
Category: Book

Buy Used: £4.78



Used (10) from £4.78

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews

Format: Import
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st ed
Pages: 210

ISBN: 0385170262
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
EAN: 9780385170260
ASIN: 0385170262

Publication Date: 1980
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Lake of Darkness
  • Paperback - The Lake of Darkness
  • Paperback - The Lake of Darkness (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard)
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Lake of Darkness
  • Audio Cassette - The Lake of Darkness: Complete & Unabridged
  • Hardcover - Lake of Darkness

Similar Items:

  • The Tree of Hands
  • The Secret House of Death
  • The Killing Doll
  • Master of the Moor
  • A Demon in My View

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars The Lake Of Darkness   January 3, 2006
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

One of the reasons I'm such a big fan of Ruth Rendell, and why I come back to her books again and again, is that in the best of her stories she is brilliant at conjuring up Atmosphere. Hers is a world of dysfunctional characters, sidelined by life, eking out an existence in grim bedsits, beset by dark memories and emotional angst, haunting London's streets and parks. I wouldn't say "The Lake Of Darkness" is absolutely prime vintage Rendell, but it is highly readable. Martin Urban wins a small fortune on the football pools, (those were the days!), but decides he wants to use the money to help those worse off than himself. Unfortunately he is not met by the ecstatic cries of gratitude that he expects, but usually confusion and suspicion. All too late he realises that not everybody is as naturally good-hearted and philanthropic as himself. He becomes besotted with Francesca, a young girl who works in a florists, and longs to set her up in a luxury flat of her own. What Martin doesn't realise is that Francesca is living a double life. In reality she lives in near-squalour with Tim, a good-looking but thoroughly unscrupulous young man, who (just to add to the general confusion) Martin had once had a gay crush on. Tim sees Martin's infatuation with Francesca as a useful means to seek revenge on his ex-admirer, and shaft him of every penny he owns.

As if all this wasn't enough, we also have a very strange young man called Finn, who fancies himself as an Aleister Crowley-type magician, and dabbler in the paranormal. Finn livees with his mentally-ill mother, who once worked as a cleaner for Martin's mother, and who now spends her days buying up cheap, useless tat off market stalls, and reading the Tarot cards. Martin decides he also wants to set her up in a better home, but reckons without Finn's dark dealings. The reason I've knocked off a star is because sometimes it all feels a bit rushed, as though the author felt she had to quickly knock it out to meet a deadline. This is a shame, as the characters are fascinating, (except Francesca who is a trifle one-dimensional and gormless, and even the author seemed to get bored with her towards the end), and the intricate complexities of the story demand a slower pace. It's still very good though, and the twist right at the very end genuinely took me by surprise. It's well worth a second reading.


5 out of 5 stars THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY...   September 6, 2003
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Ruth Rendell is a fabulous British author who has churned out mystery after mystery filled with dark, demented twists. This is another tautly plotted, well crafted mystery with characters that, though seemingly normal, are just a tad off the beaten path.

This book features Martin Urban, a staid and somewhat stuffy young man who would have felt at home in Victorian England. Martin wins a very large sum of money in a football pool with a little help from Tim Sage, an old friend of his. Altruistic and given to some rather god-like pronouncements, Martin wishes to give the money away to the deserving poor, in order to enable them to buy a home. Poor Martin, there are none so blind, as those who will not see.

Beset by subliminal homo-erotic thoughts regarding Tim Sage, he meets a mysterious young woman named Francesca, who is as demure and submissive as a Victorian maiden and captures his heart. Unfortunately, she is bound to another. All, however, is not as Martin thinks that it is.

Enter Finn, the twisted son of Lena, former cleaning lady to Martin's mother. When Finn's path crosses that of Martin's, during one of Martin's fumbling attempts to give some of his winnings away, a very clever dialogue ensues between these two with some unexpected, deadly results.

Fans of Ms. Rendell will not be disappointed by this book. It is filled with the slightly off-beat characters for which she is known, some of whom harbor dark twisted thoughts, while others are entirely socio-pathic. Well-written is spare, clear prose and filled with enough twists and turns to satisfy the most discerning of readers, this is another gem in Ms. Rendell's treasure trove of mysteries.