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THE TURNGLASS by Gareth Rubin

THE TURNGLASS

by Gareth Rubin

Pub Date: Dec. 3rd, 2024
ISBN: 9781454955979
Publisher: Union Square & Co.

A clever, gimmicky novel pairs two intersecting stories, one set in Victorian England and the other in Los Angeles in 1939.

Rubin sets the novel up as a “tête-bêche,” in which each novella occupies half the pages and the reader switches from one to the other by flipping and rotating the book. The stories can be read in either order, and each provides clues for and parallels to the other. In the British story, ambitious epidemiologist Simeon Lee, hoping for an inheritance, goes to care for his father’s ailing cousin, Oliver Hawes, at Turnglass House—located on a remote island off the coast of Essex—where he discovers that Oliver has imprisoned his sister-in-law, Florence, convicted of killing his brother, in a glass room. When Simeon discovers a tête-bêche in which Oliver has recorded a journal, he begins to investigate the past of the house and its inhabitants, and discovers a murky, bloody history. In the California story, aspiring actor and advertising writer Ken Kourian gets acquainted with wealthy novelist Oliver Tooke and his mysterious sister, Coraline, children of a conservative California governor with presidential ambitions. When Oliver is found dead at his writing studio close to a replica of Turnglass House, suicide is assumed, but Ken has his doubts. Then he reads a manuscript Oliver left behind, set at the British Turnglass House, and discovers clues that lead to murder and family secrets. Rubin has a gift for mimicking the style of potboiler mysteries, and fans of California noir and gothics set in family manors will find pastiches of both here. Though at times Rubin appears to be jamming the pieces of his elaborate puzzle together, the assemblage glitters with cunning cross-references.

Shallow but diverting tales challenge the brain without touching the heart.