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The Opium-Eater

ebook / ISBN-13: 9781473611511

Price: £0.99

ON SALE: 26th February 2015

Genre: Fiction & Related Items / Crime & Mystery / Historical Mysteries

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From bestselling thriller author David Morrell comes a brooding tale about the coldest of deaths and their heartbreaking aftermath.

Thomas De Quincey – the central character of Morrell’s acclaimed Victorian mysteries, MURDER AS A FINE ART and INSPECTOR OF THE DEAD – was one of the most notorious and brilliant literary personalities of the 1800s. His infamous Confessions of an English Opium-Eater made history as the first book about drug dependency. He invented the word ‘subconscious’ and anticipated Freud’s psychoanalytic theories by more than a half century. His blood-soaked essays and stories influenced Edgar Allan Poe, who in turn inspired Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to create Sherlock Holmes.

But at the core of it all was a terrible tragedy. In this special-edition novella, based on real-life events, De Quincey shares the story of a horrific snowstorm fifty years earlier, in which a mother and father died and their six children were trapped in the mountains of the Lake District. Even more gripping is what happened after. This is the true tale of how De Quincey became the Opium-Eater, brought to life by an award-winning storyteller.

An afterword contains photos of the dramatic locations in the story.

Reviews

Praise for David Morrell
.
The finest thriller writer living today, bar none.
Steve Berry
A master of suspense....If you're reading Morrell, you're sitting on the edge of your seat.
Michael Connelly
An absolute master of the thriller
Dean Koontz
Nobody does this better than David Morrell
Lee Child
A titan among thriller writers.
Joseph Finder
The father of the modern action novel
Vince Flynn
Master storyteller David Morrell . . . thrills us with heart-pounding suspense while tugging at our emotions.
Tess Gerritsen
A terrific read. As one would expect of Morrell, it is compulsive and thrilling, but its use of de Quincey also allows for discursions that are both funny and touching - de Quincey and his daughter are great additions to the detective stage, and I hope we will have a lot more of them to come.
Judith Flanders, author of <i>The Invention of Murder</i>
David Morrell fans - and they are Legion - can look forward to celebrating Murder As a Fine Art as one of their favorite author's strongest and boldest books in years.
Dan Simmons, author of <i>Drood</i>
[An] exceptional historical mystery...page-flipping action, taut atmosphere, and multifaceted characters
Booklist
Shockingly real...Morrell's thorough and erudite research of the people and culture of the British Empire's heyday informs every page. A literary thriller that pushes the envelope of fear
Associated Press
Masterful...brilliantly plotted....evokes 1854 London with such finesse that you'll hear the hooves clattering on cobblestones
Entertainment Weekly
Brilliant. Everything works - the horrifying depiction of the murders, the asides explaining the impact of train travel on English society, nail-biting action sequences - making this book an epitome of the intelligent page-turner.
Publishers Weekly
A gaslit gallop through Victorian London
Financial Times