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The Woman in White

When I was in high school and college, I had an extended flirtation with Victorian art. Prose, in the form of Thomas Hardy and Thomas Love Peacock, poetry in the form of Alfred Lord Tennyson and painting in the form of the pre-Raphaelites. I left that behind when I got married and went to grad school. With that background, I read a favorable review by Facebook friend  Steve Pick of “The Woman in White” by Wilkie Collins and was intrigued enough to add it to my “books to read” list. The Woman in White is a mystery written in 1959 and is set in 1849-50 England. Stylistically, the prose is very Victorian. Structurally, the novel is unusual in that it is organized as a series of narratives written by different characters describing events as they saw them. Collins does a great job with the distinct voices of the narrators. The book is quite slow to start. As accustomed as I am to Victorian writing, I found the first 20% or so (this was an ebook, so the progress is measured in per...