Dorothy Eden was born in 1912 in New Zealand and died in 1982. She moved to England in 1954 after taking a trip around the world and falling in love with the country. She was best known for her many mystery and romance books as well as short stories that were published in periodicals. As a novelist, Dorothy Eden was renowned for her ability to create fear and suspense. This earned her many devoted readers throughout her lifetime.
A young woman answers a newspaper ad and moves into a large mansion. The colourful and eccentric landlady takes shine to her, but sinister events and attempts on her life make the young woman realise she is in danger...but who from? A standard gothic to be sure, but books churned out by Dorothy Eden tend to be better than gothics churned out by other writers, so it wasn't painful to read, and the writing style is enjoyable, although I agree with another reviewer that the scenes of peril (locked in a wardrobe, a wobbly poisoned cat) are not very tense. But it was quick to read and I did not guess the ending
omg this was fucking funny ill write myself a real review soon~~ i forced my bf to read this aloud to me and we had a grand time
Cressida was a profoundly dumb dumby. Often the book was intentionally funny, and frequently perhaps unintentionally, which meant we were laughing constantly. there were an alarming number of grammatical issues and misspelled words (which i enjoyed bc my boyfriend had to read them aloud.) the love interest was named Jeremy Winter which sounds so 2000s boy band and had disturbingly mobile eyebrows… i want to write an inverse of this that is class warfare?
dorothy eden writes old woman characters really well & im way more into this than whistle for the crows—the eden train is looking up!
One of the worst books I have ever read! I recently started reading old gothic romances and picked this one out because it sounded interesting. It is terribly written. There are conversations and plot points that make very little sense. The main character is a complete stereotype of the innocent girl who finds herself in a house of mystery. Yet, as the mystery unwinds it becomes more and more improbable and ridiculous. I laughed through the last 70 pages of this 200 page book. There were also many misspelled words and grammatical mistakes though my copy was a paperback printed in 1970 so the mistakes may have been fixed in further printings. I finished the book only because I wanted it to be over. If I stopped halfway through I might one day wonder...No. probably not. One example of the silliness....at one point Cressida thought a furry coat would suffocate her when she was pushed into the closet by an unseen tenant.