Wylder's Hand: A Victorian Sensation Mystery of Gothic Inheritance, Missing Heirs, Family Secrets, and Legal Intrigue
Synopsis
Wylder's Hand (1864) is a masterful Victorian sensation novel in which a vanished bridegroom, Mark Wylder, leaves behind a tangle of inheritance, desire, forgery, and murder. Set amid the ominous respectability of Brandon Hall, the novel turns domestic and legal institutions into engines of dread. Le Fanu's style is patient, insinuating, and psychologically acute: he mingles Gothic atmosphere with the procedural intricacies of wills, letters, and social surveillance, placing the book beside the work of Wilkie Collins while retaining his own darker moral irony. Sheridan Le Fanu, the great Irish writer of supernatural and mystery fiction, brought to the novel a deep knowledge of law, journalism, antiquarian lore, and Anglo-Irish social anxiety. As editor and storyteller, he understood how secrecy circulates through households and communities. His lifelong fascination with hidden guilt, spectral consequence, and corrupted gentility clearly informs the plotting and tone of Wylder's Hand. Readers who value intricate Victorian plotting, morally ambiguous characters, and suspense grounded in both psychology and social critique will find this novel richly rewarding. It is essential Le Fanu: urbane, sinister, and quietly devastating.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Good Press
- ISBN: 9788027229444
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 15 mm
- Weight: 401g
- Languages: English
