Search Books
The Fourth Book of After Mi…

The King's General

Author Daphne du Maurier
Publisher Doubleday
Category English fiction
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
6.28 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ In Stock.

Share:
Book Details
PublisherDoubleday
ISBN / ASIN0575003324
ISBN-139780575003323
AvailabilityIn Stock.
Sales Rank3,277,513
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

ONE OF Miss du Maurier's most engaging talents is her ability to incorporate here the best features of her previous books without once repeating herself. THE KING'S GENERAL has much of the depth of Hungry Hill, some of the suspense of Rebecca, a little of the swashbuckling of Frenchman's Creek, but is nothing like any of them. Menabilly stands bare and desolate on the Cornish coast, its ivy-covered walls hiding the secret which two people will carry to their graves; Honor Harris, so injured as a girl that she never walked again, and Sir Richard Grenvile, the King's General in the West, resentful, proud, bitter to the end. The only man Honor ever loved. She saw him for the first time on the night of her eighteenth birthday at the Duke of Buckingham's ball. Richard was already a veteran of foreign wars and on his way to fame and power. She bade him a final farewell years later when, his cause lost and Menabilly surrounded by the forces of the enemy, he vanished through a secret passage from her life. To tell more of the story here would be unfair. Only Miss du Maurier is able to do justice to the hairbreadth escapes and exciting events which punctuate this tale of three hundred years ago, told as if it happened yesterday.
The Fourth Book of After Midnight Stories (Ulverscroft…
View
A Question of Trust (Mills & Boon)
View
Mansfield Park (World's Classics S)
View
Flowering Judas
View
Dragonquest: Being the further adventures of the Drago…
View
The fly boys: Sky-jacked
View
Between Time & Timbuktu, or, Prometheus-5: A Space Fan…
View
The Fabrication of the Late Victorian Femme Fatale: Th…
View
The Longman Companion to Victorian Fiction
View