Ratings1
Average rating2
To Florence Hackett and her daughters Elinor and Louisa, Richard Baurie, a handsome young bookstore clerk and aspiring poet, seems a little odd but harmless enough. With his amusing conversation and his eager-to-please attitude, Richard works his way into the Hacketts' confidence until he is almost one of the family. When he suggests they rent Wisteria Cottage, a charming seaside residence, it seems to promise a summer of pleasant companionship and fun. What the Hacketts don't know is that Richard is a deeply troubled individual, recently released from a mental institution, and that their relaxing summer holiday will soon turn into a terrifying nightmare.... A brilliant psychological examination of criminal insanity, Robert M. Coates's Wisteria Cottage (1948) earned rave reviews on its initial publication and was adapted for the 1958 film noir Edge of Fury. As Mathilde Roza writes in the introduction to this new edition, "the novel has lost nothing of its remarkable power of taking the reader into a disturbed man's world." "A brilliant tour de force."--The New York Times Book Review "Top peaks of terror . . . a grade-A psycho-thriller!"--Saturday Review "As direct and frightening as the uncoiling of a serpent."--Commonweal
Reviews with the most likes.
Spoilers
TW: Rape
The book is a complete snooze-fest for the first 150 pages which is sad because the edition I have is only 194 pages long. The cover art is absolutely stunning on the edition I own. The ending was the highlight of the story and even then it wasn't mind blowing. I would give this book 1 star but it's saving grace was the ending, the idea of the general plot and the beautiful cover.
I have a particular issue with the scene where Richard rapes Elinor on the beach. It was shocking to see the way the author portrayed Elinor after the altercation. I'm not sure most women if not all would offer “kissing lessons” to their rapist. The way the female characters are described is a bit sexist to say the least but I'm not sure that's the author's ideologies or written that way on purpose to show Richard's misogyny.
Either way, the book is old and outdated. I received it in a subscription box which is the only reason I have it. I can see myself donating it in the near future.