Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

In Strange Company

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
1894

Pages
  
300pp

Author
  
Guy Boothby

Followed by
  
A Lost Endeavour

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1894

Genre
  
Fiction

In Strange Company t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSLtZxcG3KVB51Pci

Publisher
  
Ward, Lock & Bowden, London

Similar
  
The Mystery of the Clasp, Pharos the Egyptian, The Viceroy's Protegé, Dr Nikola's Experiment with Thre, A Bid for Fortune or Dr Nikola

In strange company s promo 1


In Strange Company : a story of Chili and the southern seas (1894) is a novel by Australian writer Guy Boothby.

Contents

Story outline

Marmaduke Plowden has embezzled 200 hundred thousand pounds from his clients in London and fled the country for Chili. A number of unsavoury characters learn about the theft and set plans in motion to retrieve the money for themselves.

Critical reception

A reviewer in The Telegraph (Brisbane) praised the book for being a good example of its type: "This book will be very welcome to all those who love a straightforward tale without great intricacy of plot, subtle delineation of character, or fine local colour. It is a good example of a class of work growing common enough of late when life in the open air and the stir of conflict are preferred to hysterical, drawing-room emotion and unholy passion. There is not one word of harm in the whole story, but on the contrary much refreshment for man or boy who is tired of the ceaseless. irritations of city life."

Continuing that approach, a reviewer in The Morning Bulletin (Rockhampton) found some worth in the book: "In Strange Company is a rattling story of adventure, in the course of which the reader is carried from the Isle of Wight to London, thence to the Argentine Republic, from there to Chili, then to Tahiti, Thursday Island; Batavia, and back to London where the tale finishes. Mr. Boothby tells his story vividly and stirringly, and if he fills it with incredible incidents he does not annoy the reader by fine-spun attempts to give an air of strict truth and literal accuracy to every turn of his narrative. Neither does he weary him with long descriptions of scenery. The beauty of the southern seas has evidently touched Mr. Boothby closely, and at times he gives a distinct impression of the islands of the Pacific in a few crisp sentences."

References

In Strange Company Wikipedia