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The Woman of Death

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
1900

Pages
  
307pp

Author
  
Guy Boothby

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1900

Genre
  
Fiction

Publisher
  
George Bell & Sons, London

Similar
  
In Strange Company, The Mystery of the Clasp, Pharos the Egyptian, The Viceroy's Protegé, Dr Nikola's Experiment with Thre

The Woman of Death (1900) is a novel by Australian writer Guy Boothby.

Contents

Story outline

The main character in the novel, Lord Middlesborough, is very wealthy, but is becoming bored with life. In Monte Carlo he meets Madame d'Espere who gives the impression that she is in possession of some sort of occult power. In Paris Middlesborough is introduced to a strange, secret club whose members participate, by lot, in duels to the death each fortnight. Middlesborough subsequently meets and marries Cecille de Tavernae, whose father is also a member of the club. The novel reaches a climax when Middlesborough is drawn to meet his father-in-law in a duel.

Critical reception

A reviewer in The Capricornian detected a sameness about the work: "He has fertility of invention; he devises plots cleveriy, and works them out as realistically, as possible, but the characters and incidents are becoming familiar, and he does not throw in the descriptions which give a charm to The Beautiful White Devil and some other of his productions."

A note in The Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate stated: "In this, his latest production, the author has abandoned his famous creation, Dr. Nikola, and introduces to us a female character as unreal and devilish as the former. The incidents are mainly laid in Paris, and are sensational enough to satisfy the most exacting lover of literature of that kind. The volume is a good illustration of Boothby's popular style, and will doubtless find many readers amongst those who read only to forget."

References

The Woman of Death Wikipedia