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The Pierced Heart

par Lynn Shepherd

Séries: Charles Maddox (4)

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9421287,942 (3.36)10
When Detective Charles Maddox is requested to look into the mysterious Baron Von Reisenberg, he welcomes the chance to trade London streets for a castle in the Viennese countryside. Though the Baron is the subject of macabre legends, Maddox doesn't care for supernatural beliefs. That is, until the foreboding shadows of the castle haunt him with nightmares and he is plagued by a series of disturbing incidents.… (plus d'informations)
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Affichage de 1-5 de 22 (suivant | tout afficher)
This is the third of the author's literary pastiches I have read, this one being based on Bram Stoker's Dracula. A German scientist Baron Von Reisenberg is conducted mysterious experiments in his castle in Austria and young women are disappearing there and in London. The final explanation turns out to be more scientific than vampiric, with some interesting twists and turns in the last couple of chapters. I thought this was a great read, well written and with a good sense of gothic atmosphere, and is my favourite of the three of her novels I have read. I noticed with slight annoyance half way through that this is, however, the fourth in the Charles Maddox series, not the third, so I will need to go back and re-read this and hope that doesn't make too much of a difference to the flow of the series. ( )
  john257hopper | Jan 17, 2021 |
It seems like when I comment on the book I'm currently reading before I've finished, it's akin to the 'kiss of death', because inevitably the book somehow, someway begins to fizzle and what once seemed like a slam-dunk 5 star rating loses ground and finishes with far fewer stars.

The book is steeped in Dracula references, atmospheric settings, and dark, foreboding characters, and features a recurring character, Charles Maddox. Its beginning was gripping and rich in ambience, which set the scene perfectly for a cliche horror story.
Maddox was really only a small cog in this story, the real star was the evil Baron Von Reisenberg, although he could just as well have been a Count, if you get my drift.

Because the book started out like gangbusters, the fact that a large chunk of the middle was excruciatingly difficult to read, was a real bummer. It was a struggle to wade through and I was disappointed that the same pace couldn't have been maintained throughout. The end was also a let down, with it's too pat ending, but it did leave a segue for the author to begin the next in the series, which I gather was her intent.

( )
  Iambookish | Dec 14, 2016 |
'Dracula' meets 19th-century Science and Séance. But, mainly, it's Dracula.
For the first 2/3rds of the book, the story was similar enough that I had to say: "Why not just go read Bram Stoker?"
The ending picks up the pace and mixes it up a bit - although there's a 'twist' at the end that will likely only be appreciated by people that have read the previous three books in this series (I have not.)

A young British man is sent to investigate the reputation of a foreign nobleman who wishes to make a significant donation to a bequest. It wouldn't do, you see, for an institution to accept money from a questionable source.

Unfortunately, although the giver is undeniably noble, wealthy and a brilliant businessman and inventor, questions do indeed arise. His castle is downright spooky, he's clearly hiding secrets, the local peasants are superstitious about him, and then there's a odd correlation between his travels and the location of the discoveries of the mutilated bodies of murdered young women...

Meanwhile, a young woman with a tendency toward the vapors travels as well, assisting her father with his magic show - one that has recently taken a turn toward spiritualism. Her health has also taken a turn for the worse, and in desperation, her father contacts yet another doctor who's interested in proposing an experimental course of treatment...

The book is billed as a 'Charlie Maddox mystery' but honestly, I never got much of a sense of Mr. Maddox here. The two main characters are the swooning, easily-influenced Lucy, and the enigmatic Dracula, I mean, Baron Von Reisenberg.

The prose is a faux-19th-century style, which I didn't mind - except when the voice of a modern narrator intrudes unnecessarily, which happens periodically. (Things like: 'once called a sequential killer, nearly a hundred years before the coinage of a far better-known modern phrase' or mentioning in passing that arsenic in paint [unknown to any of the characters] will, years later, cause the demise of attendants at an asylum.) It's jarring, and moreover, the style of the book is out-of-place and inappropriate if the narrator is presumed to be modern-day.

Overall - I certainly couldn't say the book was strikingly original, and it has its flaws, but I did enjoy reading it. I'd recommend it for fans of the original Dracula who enjoy tributes to the classic tale.

Many thanks to NetGalley for providing a copy of this book. As always, my opinions are solely my own. ( )
  AltheaAnn | Feb 9, 2016 |
DNFed at 37%. And Lord, I'm surprised I made it that far.

Here's a list of issues I had with this book.

First off, the writing style is ridiculously difficult to read. It's like the author tried way too hard to exactly emulate the common writing styles of the book's time setting (19th Century) -- with the end result being a style that is largely inaccessible to the modern reader. It takes a substantial amount of effort to follow this story because of the style, and, quite frankly, that is not what I'm looking for in my usual modern read. If I want a challenging, classic-like book read, I'll read an actual classic instead of a modern-day imitation of one.

All around, the style choice was just very poor. Not only because it was so difficult but because it served to distance me from the main character in a way that made me feel...absolutely nothing for him. I didn't care about the protagonist at all because I consistently felt very far away from him.

Those issues alone were enough to turn me off this book very, very quickly.

But they were further exasperated by the...super-weird, awkward plot. The first 30% of the book (according to my Kindle) is like this strange, tacked-on, prologue-esque section that occurs before the actual plot of the book starts. It's like one super-long backstory that pretty much gives away all the mystery that could have existed in the main plot (that doesn't start for a third of the book). That's what it read like. It was...odd. It felt odd. It didn't read "right" to me at all. It was, quite possibly, the strangest structural choice I could have ever conceived for what was supposed to be a (paranormal) historical mystery.

Not a good experience.

Alll around, this book fell flat for me. The writing was hard to follow. The protagonist was hard to like. And the plot...I'm still not entirely sure how to describe that. It just didn't work for me.

Rating

2/5

____

... Disclosure

I received a free ebook copy of this title from the publisher via Edelweiss in exchange for an honest review. ( )
  ClaraCoulson | Nov 16, 2015 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I'd read the first two of this series and enjoyed them before requesting this one through Early Reviewers. In the series featuring Charles Maddox, Lynn Shepherd turns British classics of the 19th Century into mysteries and has a detective of the era investigate them, and the results were quite interesting homages to the originals, as well as fairly decent mysteries in their own rights. I'd not read the third one, mostly because I'm not all that interested in the Romantic poets but more just because I'd never gotten around to it. But this one made sense without having read the third, and I suspect would be more or less understandable without having read any of the previous novels.

Personally, though, if I'd started with this installment, I'd not have wanted to go back to the others. This is primarily due to my aversion to serial killer novels, especially those featuring Jack-the-Ripper knockoffs. I mean, is it really necessary to feature dismembered women? In this case, there's an explanation that works decently, but it's still an irritating and off-putting trope, and one I really wish didn't occur so often.

In this case, the audacity of mingling a real-life (weird) scientific pioneer with the fictional Count Dracula kept me reading, and in the end I more or less enjoyed this one, despite the more disgusting elements. The mystery itself was a little unfair, but did a fine job of accounting logically for mythological elements. The characters weren't particularly engaging, but they weren't just stick figures, so all in all it wasn't hard to go along with the novel--and it was quite atmospheric, which helps.
  InfoQuest | Jul 27, 2015 |
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When Detective Charles Maddox is requested to look into the mysterious Baron Von Reisenberg, he welcomes the chance to trade London streets for a castle in the Viennese countryside. Though the Baron is the subject of macabre legends, Maddox doesn't care for supernatural beliefs. That is, until the foreboding shadows of the castle haunt him with nightmares and he is plagued by a series of disturbing incidents.

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