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The House at Midnight
  

The House at Midnight (Mass Market Paperback)

by Lucie Whitehouse (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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From Publishers Weekly

At 30, Londoner Joanna still spends her free time with her Oxford college friends, now with burgeoning careers and all on the cusp of real adulthood. Lucas, Joanna's closest friend and prolonged crush, inherits Stoneborough Manor, a huge and imposing house in the Cotswold countryside filled with priceless art, where all the college friends are to spend every weekend together. The first visit, on New Year's Eve, doesn't start well, as the Londoners get lost. To Joanna, the manor has a threatening and unsettling aura, and indeed, the big, dark, vaguely confusing house with its secrets and disappointments works well as an allegory for moving into the responsibilities and fears of growing up. Joanna and her friends proceed to deal with the unknown, some well, others destructively. A focus on the shifting relationships and loyalties doesn't leave much room for plot, but Joanna's voice is engaging, and Londoner Whitehouse, making her debut, manages to generate a lot of interest in the somewhat flat Four Weddings and a Funeral-esque ensemble: she gets the insecurities, pedigrees and Cotswold locale spot on. Unfortunately, this promising first effort features a truncated ending that is less evocative than jarring. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Publishing News

“Whitehouse turns a fascinating exposure of manipulation amid the fraught carnival of fragile relationships into very accessible literary fiction, spicy enough for the 21st century and stylishly written, with twists aplenty powering the narrative drive into a horrific climax.” --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A silly, somewhat pretenious, although not unenjoyable, mess of a mystery, Aug 7 2008
By Amy MacDougall (Mississauga, ON Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The House at Midnight (Paperback)
Lucie Whitehouse's first novel has gothic overtones and features lots of twenty and thirtysomething privileged Brits who meet up for sex, drinking, drugs, and parties at old Stoneborough mansion in the middle of the rural English countryside. Whitehouse's novel is like a trashy soap opera, with one anticlimatic chapter after another. The melodrama is centred around Jo, a would-be journalist who can never quite get her career off the ground, and her group of friends who constantly swap boyfriends and girlfriends amongst themselves. Jo's dilemma is that she must choose between stable Greg and not so stable Lucas. Framing the relationship issues is the setting: a seemingly cursed old mansion that Lucas has recently inherited from his deceased uncle.

Whitehouse tries to elevate the characters and their conflicts by resorting to needlessly wordy and convoluted sentence structure. She also often tells, rather than show the reader character development. The result is a detachment from the protagonist and her group of unlikeable friends. The moral looseness that embodies the characters' actions does make for amusing, although not always realistic, reading. By the last quarter of this lengthy novel the plot starts to drag on as the reader wishes Jo and her friends would just grow up already.

The novel is not a light read, however, it is, at times, somewhat entertaining. The suspenseful subplot involving the suicide of a family member does keep the reader's interest, however the conclusion is quite predictable and lacks impact. The House at Midnight hooks the reader in, and then keeps the reader waiting for too long to resolve the characters' conflicts and issues. [Amy MacDougall]
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