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The Lightning Conductor #1

The Lightning Conductor The Strange Adventures of a Motor-Car

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This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

276 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 14, 1903

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47 people want to read

About the author

C.N. Williamson

318 books8 followers
Charles Norris Williamson, 1859–1920, British writer and journalist

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5 stars
16 (22%)
4 stars
25 (34%)
3 stars
22 (30%)
2 stars
8 (11%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Rick.
1,080 reviews29 followers
December 17, 2022
For what is basically a travelogue of sights in France and a look at all the ways early motor cars had problems, this was a witty, intriguing, and fascinating read. The romantic aspect of it was fun. The side characters introduced on the trip added enough stakes to keep things interesting. Though big portions of this book are simply people writing letters describing French locations, I enjoyed every minute of it. I feel like I learned a lot while being entertained. It was also enlightening to see the way class was handled in society at the time the book was written. It is super classist, but I also suspect, it is very true to life back then. If you consider that the writer was a woman who had to publish under a male name, you get an idea of the backwards way society looked at class and gender. That is not to say that we have it all figured out even now. Thanks to the Literary Letters substack for putting this on my radar. It would have never crossed my path otherwise.
Profile Image for sydney.
85 reviews
January 31, 2023
bro this girl is nuts!!! i love her!!!

what else is there to say!!

if you want a lighthearted romp throughout europe with the dream that is unlimited money and power, seeing beautiful things through beautiful eyes, here you go. oh how i enjoyed this.
Profile Image for Carmen.
266 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2023
Better as an Edwardian travelogue than a narrative, but that also could have been the format. Available on Project Gutenberg, I read this as part of the Literary Letters Substack (up to today, when I went ahead and finished it as I'll not have time at the weekend). I love these communal read-alongs, but I think the relatively short timespan of the novel combined with large gaps between each entry and the length of each one made it a slightly less satisfying experience than Dracula Daily. That said, I never would have read this otherwise! It was great fun, and I look forward to what Literary Letters do next.
Profile Image for Catherine.
464 reviews13 followers
January 29, 2023
Last year, I did the Dracula Daily substack read. If you haven't heard of it, basically you subscribe to a substack that sends you the entirety of Bram Stoker's famous novel, 'Dracula,' in real-time according to the dates in the book.
I enjoyed that so much that, after it was finished, I decided I wanted to check out more substacks of classic epistolary novels.
That was when I found this one.
Now, I had never heard of this book and that surprised me. Usually, even if I haven't read a classic novel I've at least heard of it.
But I went into 'The Lightening Conductor,' with only a basic description of the plot and. I. LOVED. This.

This is a fantastic novel. Funny, thrilling, and with incredibly beautiful descriptions of the French and Italian countrysides that were so vivid I legitimately felt like I was there.
I really enjoyed the characters in this one and the way that they (especially Molly, the main character) were written.
Also the look at driving culture right after the car was invented, when a lot of towns in Europe didn't even have drivable roads, was fascinating.
I highly recommend this to anyone who enjoys classic novels. I promise it's not dry or boring at all and actually pretty short.
5 stars!

Profile Image for Hannah.
2,789 reviews1,432 followers
December 22, 2016
This is the second book of the Williamsons' that I read. I loved every hilarious minute. What could go wrong during a motoring trip in Europe in the early 1900s? Everything, apparently...until the right young man arrives who knows how to make a car run correctly. It is well written, witty, interesting, and romantic.
Profile Image for Ruthenator.
104 reviews
January 2, 2024
(3.5 stars, a fun read, especially if you keep google maps open to follow the journey through France and Italy, hovering over place names to see photos)
Reading this "in real time" via Literary Letters, an email subscription in which you are sent the book in accordance with each date of the letters written that make up this novel. (Actually I started late and just caught up so *now* am reading it along with the dated letters)
Profile Image for Melissa.
543 reviews4 followers
December 20, 2017
Such an absolute gem of travelogue and shenanigans! Simply fun, funny, and edifying. If you only had the necessary backdrops and props, this would make a perfect play with a perfectly (& quickly) wrapped up ending. Satisfying and sweet; old-fashioned and lovely.
Profile Image for Littlerhymes.
302 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2023
American Molly Randolph is on a grand tour of Europe with her aunt when she decides to purchase one of those newfangled motor-cars. Along the way she picks up a chauffeur called Brown who is simply too dashing and knowledgeable to be real; and in fact he's not, he is an English nobleman in disguise who just wants to get closer to Molly.

Apparently this was a huge hit in the 1900s but I found it a crashing (sorry) bore most of the time. The Jack/Brown hidden identity thing should be the engine (sorry) that drives the plot and instead it feels almost incidental. I kept waiting for Molly's rapturous descriptions of Europe to end so we could get back to the story but in fact the travelogue is at least three quarters of the story.

The travelogue aspects are great if that's all you want out of it, but I'd rather have dropped all of that and had a neat novella.
Profile Image for Emmy.
2,433 reviews56 followers
February 1, 2023
I've been slowly reading this story through Substack, and I have to say, it was quite fun! While the long depictions of travels and sites sometimes wore my patience a little thin, the story itself (and the romance at the center of it all) was quite fun. I'd definitely read more by this author-duo, if only to explore more adventures of the Lightning Conductor!
Profile Image for Karen.
2,565 reviews
November 15, 2022
Probably more of a 2.5. Ludicrous plot but entertainingly written, witty with interesting period detail (it was written in 1903). It did however drag on for about 70 more pages than were really neccessary and towards the end it was a bit of a chore.
Profile Image for Margo.
35 reviews
January 30, 2023
What a delightful surprise this book was! The travelogue element was a bit much for my modern tastes, but the look into early car culture is fascinating. Most importantly, the voice, characters, and comedy are top-notch. A charming romcom.
Profile Image for Nat.
356 reviews1 follower
January 30, 2023
For a book that just describes sights on a road trip at the turn of the century, this was a cute, fun story to read. I enjoyed the characters and their dynamics, which was what kept me reading.
Profile Image for Alisha.
1,217 reviews130 followers
November 16, 2012
This had all the elements of the normal Williamsons' book: someone is in disguise, people are taking a road-trip and waxing poetic about the sights they see, and there are a couple of sort of cartoon-y villains. But for me it somehow didn't have as much sparkle.
John Winston, a wealthy young British gentleman with an automobile, catches a couple of glimpses of Molly Randolph, an American girl who is just starting on her first-ever automobile trip, with her old maiden aunt. He falls instantly in love with her. Because she's having no end of trouble with her car and because her chauffeur is a villain, John offers himself as a chauffeur in order to get to spend more time with her. She hires him, and they proceed to drive around rural France/Spain/Italy, having various car-related mishaps along the way.
It felt like there was even more travelogue stuff in this book than in some of the others, which can make the pace pretty slow. Also, I didn't like the way that John (or "Brown" as he is called when in his chauffeur role) has to force himself to be fairly subservient to Molly and the way she talks about how it's a pity that he's a chauffeur instead of a gentleman. A hundred years ago it was considered an unchanging truth that people didn't really get to escape their social class and that you were in the circumstances in which God wanted you, and that theory pops up in many novels of the period, but in this book for some reason that viewpoint grated on my nerves a bit more.
Profile Image for J..
511 reviews
July 6, 2012
What I enjoy about the Williamson's romance/travelogues are the tantalizing references to history and geography that I have no knowledge of. I have to read with access to google and wikipedia and continually look up names and places. I've learned a lot about European history and geography. Plus the descriptions of the necessary travel gear and comments about speeding along at twenty miles an hour are pretty funny.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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