By Gaslight: A Novel
By Gaslight: A Novel book cover

By Gaslight: A Novel

Paperback – October 3, 2017

Price
$16.74
Format
Paperback
Pages
752
Publisher
Picador
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250141200
Dimensions
6.21 x 1.32 x 8.92 inches
Weight
1.5 pounds

Description

" By Gaslight can be seen as Arthur Conan Doyle by way of Dickens by way of Faulkner . . . Intense, London-centric, threaded through with a melancholy brilliance, it is an extravagant novel that takes inspiration from the classics and yet remains wholly itself." ―Jean Zimmerman, NPR.org The immersive grandeur and gravity of Price’s (Into That Darkness) sophomore novel might answer the literary cognoscenti question: “Where are today’s Dickenses, xadRadcliffes, and Twains?” . . . Price’s naturalism is unsentimental, adding verisimilitude to a book already thrumming with emotional and psychological realism." ― Library Journal “ By Gaslight is Steven Price's extraordinary historical novel, finely written and deeply researched, about the period just following the Civil War, the son of America's most famous detective (Allen Pinkerton), and a cast of truly powerful characters, half-mad and all dangerous.” ―Alan Furst, author of Night Soldiers "Steven Price has done a daring thing: taken a long look at a complex, utterly fascinating 19th-century crime. Price's gift for unraveling a terrific yarn shines through. Give this book a try." ―Caleb Carr, author of The Alienist “This sweeping tale of the unforgettable William Pinkerton and Adam Foole thrusts the reader into smoky Victorian London with all its grit and glitter. Uniting the literary grace and depth of William Faulkner and Cormac McCarthy with the intrigue and momentum of a Sherlock Holmes story, ByGaslight is completely absorbing―an epic, brilliantly written novel to rank with the world’s best.” ―Jacqueline Baker, author of The Broken Hours “This darkly mesmerizing tale is worthy of the great Victorian thriller writers, but Steven Price brings to his prose a sensibility and dazzling skill all his own. The gruesome, eerie events that unfold during the search for Charlotte Reckitt are given enthralling life in a book that is perfectly grounded in period and rich in incident and image. Haunting and deeply satisfying.”―Marina Endicott, author of Close to Hugh “A poetic, persuasive pea-souper. Think Dickens with Maigret’s whiskers.” ―Anakana Schofield, author of Martin John “A dark tale of love, betrayal and murder that reaches from the slums of Victorian London to the diamond mines in South Africa, to the American Civil War and back. Superb storytelling.” ―Kurt Palka, author of the Piano Maker Steven Price 's first collection of poems, Anatomy of Keys (2006), won Canada's 2007 Gerald Lampert Award for Best First Collection, was short-listed for the BC Poetry Prize, and was named a Globe and Mail Book of the Year. His first novel, Into That Darkness (2011), was short-listed for the 2012 BC Fiction Prize. His second collection of poems, Omens in the Year of the Ox (2012), won the 2013 ReLit Award. He lives in Victoria, British Columbia, with his family.

Features & Highlights

  • A literary tour de force of a detective's ceaseless hunt for an elusive criminal
  • By Gaslight is a deeply atmospheric, haunting novel about the unending quest that has shaped a man’s life.
  • William Pinkerton is already famous, the son of the most notorious detective of all time, when he descends into the underworld of Victorian London in pursuit of a new lead on the fabled con Edward Shade. William’s father died without ever finding Shade, but William is determined to drag the thief out of the shadows.
  • Adam Foole is a gentleman without a past, haunted by a love affair ten years gone. When he receives a letter from his lost beloved, he returns to London to find her. What he learns of her fate, and its connection to the man known as Shade, will force him to confront a grief he thought long-buried.
  • A fog-enshrouded hunt through sewers, opium dens, drawing rooms, and séance halls ensues, creating the most unlikely of bonds: between Pinkerton, the great detective, and Foole, the one man who may hold the key to finding Edward Shade.
  • Steven Price’s dazzling, riveting
  • By Gaslight
  • moves from the diamond mines of South Africa to the battlefields of the Civil War, on a journey into a cityscape of grief, trust, and its breaking, where what we share can bind us even against our darker selves.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(179)
★★★★
25%
(149)
★★★
15%
(90)
★★
7%
(42)
23%
(137)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Illuminating

There are so many unique and wonderful things about this story, and the words used to tell it, it is difficult to know where to start except that, as this novel tells us again and again, you start at the beginning.

This is a story about fathers and sons and the love that binds and constricts them to the heart of the other and how that not just effects those who might also love them, but, the world itself through which that love, unknown and unseen, and felt nonetheless, moves.

Allan Pinkerton had a detective agency. We all know that. He was the guy that Butch Cassidy kept wondering about. He also had two sons. William Pinkerton was one of them and he is the deus ex machine for the novel. He is in London. His father is dead. There was always a mystery between them. Now there is one last mystery to be solved. His name is Edward Shade.

The story loops over itself in intricate rhythms of time and history the way all stories of memory are remembered. You are walking down the streets of gaslit London and suddenly you are swept into the gore and muck of a civil war battle gone horribly wrong for the men who have fought it or you are at that dance when your wife chooses you or you are in a gallery overhearing the fate of Chinese Gordon at the Battle of Khartoum or you are at a séance and a voice of betrayal frightens you into almost giving yourself away or you are, and this passage is so memorable I have marked the pages 411-448, where you are a passenger with an Aeronaut floating over confederate battle formations signaling to your father what is to come until there is no more air between you and the ground and calamity and gravity converge on your fate.

Then there is the language. A lover's voice is described as water in sunlight. I read that phrase over and over. It was not the only image or metaphor that made you understand that this book, unlike everything in our hectic lives, is meant to be read slowly, to be rolled around on your literary taste buds like a peated scotch.

There is one thing. There are no quotation marks throughout the 731 pages. At first, this may be confusing and appear affected. It is not over time. So much of what we say and don't say is simply a matter of the failure to filter. These characters all carry interior lives so rich and central to the novel that the author does not burden them with the choice to share or not. It is all there for the reader.

This book should be read for so many good reasons. In a cultural zeitgeist that is now adamantly preaching identity over authenticity, it should be read before books like this are written no more. That is another.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

728 pages. Sad.

Oh my, who'd think a published poet would write so many uncrafted words. 728 pages! I did read it, got into the plot, but it was fun to sneer at things like "it was ever so", twice at least. Lots of nouns used as verbs, words intentionally misused. But what was the intent? Especially if the chosen word had syllables in common with a more common choice. Hmmm.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Incredible Depth

A haunting, driven tale of tumultuous times, told by a novelist whose grasp of language is breathtaking, By Gaslight is impressive on all counts. It is rare to find a novel this deep and wide. This is storytelling to savor and admire. Read this book, it is one to treasure and set aside for re-reading.
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent!

Definitely an engaging read - the author describes everything in such detail that it captures our imagination and it's like being there.

Highly recommend this book.
✓ Verified Purchase

Beautifully written book

I love the way Price writes. His imagery is vivid and I find myself rereading many of his sentences. The story and characters are engaging and the world he has created in this book is fascinating.
✓ Verified Purchase

Atmospheric and enchanting. Visceral and real.

To begin, even though I am an avid reader, I rarely write reviews. This one compelled me to. Hands down this is one of the most beautifully written novels I’ve read this year. Atmospheric, dark, broody, with all the right elements of love, hate, justice and vengeance. It’s a book that is making it hard for me now to find something to read after it, something that will measure up to my elevated expectations after reading this novel. I applaud the author in introducing characters to us in a way that simulates real life, how we all have so many layers that get peeled away slowly and carefully over time. I have read a few reviews stating that the lack of quotations is nerve wracking. I honestly didn’t realize that fact until halfway through! This book was written by a poet and if you can give yourself over to his flow and enjoy being surprised, I highly recommend this book. There was a passage in his book that really summed it up for me, regarding vengeance and justice. How they are two sides of the same coin, depending on which side you’re looking at. They both spend the same. This was what this story was for me, that’s the underlying current I picked up among the main characters. I look forward to reading more from Steven Price. Five stars all the way!!!
✓ Verified Purchase

A Literary Gem: That rare success -- A poet writes a book that's a compelling read..........

I am an incredibly, irritably impatient reader. I quit most books within the first 25 pages. And I confess that, when I saw that this was a mystery written by a poet, I felt a surge of attraction for the possibilities of the two genres united -- and a serious skepticism that he could pull it off. Too many poets are in love with their adjectives ever to allow the pacing of a narrative to truly take over.
I don't know what anyone else will think -- I have long since stopped recommending books to others -- but I feel that Price has absolutely, gorgeously pulled this off. Hundreds of pages in, I am still caught up in the current, curious, appreciative, hell-bent -- and delighted by those moments when language electrifies the tension of a scene or the heartbreak of an encounter. Price has found the perfect balance -- narrative first, pacing, tension, the ongoing calamity and uproar always driving the rhythm.....and yet the poet takes care of the lighting.....sensitive, artistic, with a deep and redolent moodiness. A great read.
✓ Verified Purchase

Overly long and boring

I bought this book for a book club. Could not finish it. Repetitive descriptions of a bleak London.

Don't bother.
✓ Verified Purchase

Mystery with poetic music in every sentence

You can tell this author is a poet; his prose burbles along like a spring brook. Yet this is a mystery novel. I like the atmospheric London depicted in the 1800s. A huge book; a great summer read. A real page turner!
✓ Verified Purchase

The search for the truth

‘By Gaslight’ by Steven Price is a novel set in the Victorian Era. Most of the story centers in London. A grittier, dirty version of London but the descriptions gives the reader a feel, smell, and taste of the city that isn’t romanticized. This holds true for the characters and what they see around them. The story revolves around two main people, William Pinkerton and the mysterious Edward Shade. Pinkerton is the son af Alan Pinkerton who founded the famous Pinkerton Detective Agency. Upon his father’s passing, Pinkerton finds a folder containing information on what appears to be an unsolved case. Who is Edward Shade and why was his father obsessed with him.

The book gives us flash backs into the lives of the Characters taking us to the midst of the US Civil War, and South Africa. Mixed in is also the murder of a woman in London. Pinkerton, while search for Shade in London, appears to be connected to the victim and agrees to help Scotland Yard with the investigation. The book is rich in descriptions and I enjoyed the depth of the characters. Price’s writing style (not using quaotations for speaking characters) is a bit annoying, but I got used to that part way through the book. Not sure why this is done.

If you enjoy period, historical fiction I think ‘By Gaslight’ is very good. More than your typical over dramatic fare.