Synopses & Reviews
Orphan Ellinor Arden is called from her secluded Paris home to London for the hearing of her estranged uncles will. To her surprise, she is named as the inheritor of his fortune, on condition that she marry his adopted son. Encouraged by her lawyer and guardian, the dashing Horace Margrave, she attaches herself irreversibly to this perfect stranger, but it soon becomes clear that her trust in a dead mans wishes has been misplaced. Suspense-ridden sensation fiction from a master of the art, The Lawyers Secret and the counterpart piece presented here, "Mystery at Fernwood," are particularly valuable for affording a rare female take on an art form still dominated by the male viewpoint.
Synopsis
Orphan Ellinor Arden is called from her secluded Paris home to London for the hearing of her estranged uncle's will. To her surprise, she is named as the inheritor of his fortune, on condition that she marry his adopted son. Encouraged by her lawyer and guardian, the dashing Horace Margrave, she attaches herself irreversibly to this perfect stranger, but it soon becomes clear that her trust in a dead man's wishes has been misplaced. Suspense-ridden sensation fiction from a master of the art,
The Lawyer's Secret and the counterpart piece presented here, "Mystery at Fernwood," are particularly valuable for affording a rare female take on an art form still dominated by the male viewpoint.
About the Author
M. E. Braddon (18351915) was a prolific novelist whose efforts to provide readers with affordable literature drove her to found Belgravia Magazine, an accessible source of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. She is best known for Lady Audleys Secret. Matthew Sweet is a journalist, broadcaster, historian, and the author of Inventing the Victorians and Shepperton Babylon.