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The Night in Question
- Narrated by: Juanita McMahon
- Length: 11 hrs and 36 mins
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Summary
Young Dot Allbones is the runt of a large Midlands family. Blessed with none of her sisters' beauty, she'll be lucky even to find a man to marry her. Whatever shall be done with Dot?
When Kate Eddowes comes up from London and moves in next door, no one expects the pretty and popular orphan to take any notice of the plain-faced and provincial Dot, five years her junior. But against the odds, the girls strike up an unlikely friendship.
As the friends become young women, the bright lights of the capital lure them south, and Dot discovers a lucrative talent for making people laugh. But even as she shines on the music hall stage, Kate's own life begins to fall apart. And the shadowy streets of Whitechapel are no place for a desperate woman to wander....
Capturing the dark heart of Victorian London with her inimitable sharpness and wry wit, Laurie Graham brings to life the bustling pleasures and not-so-hidden dangers of life in a crowded city with its extremes of poverty and wealth. And all the while, in the shadows, lurks the lacerating threat of the Ripper.
Critic reviews
"A delightfully smart and sophisticated historical novelist." ( Sunday Times)
"What a wonderful, life-enhancing, truly funny writer she is." (Wendy Buchan)
"One of my favourite writers." (Wendy Holden)
What listeners say about The Night in Question
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- debbieg
- 07-05-24
Great narration and wonderful characters
Love this author and now revisiting her after an absence of about 10 years. Such gentle humour and rounded characters. No matter the subject of her books, her light touch and page turning storyline is like being in a warm room when it’s blustery outside.
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- Paul Rice
- 14-01-22
Excellent listening gripping
Gripipng! Couldn’t stop listening this author is brilliant! I didn’t know much about this case!
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- Rachel O'Neill
- 21-05-17
Great read, great reader ...
"The Night in Question" is fun, well constructed and finely researched. so that it immerses the reader into the the darker side of Victorian times - but not without some humour along the way.
The book takes place in the colourful milieu of the Victorian Music Halls, with a feisty comedienne, Dot Allbones as main protagonist. She's a grand artiste whose friends come from all ends of the social spectrum (toffs from the West End often frequented the seedy theatres with their burlesque ladies). Dot is doing quite well, as she says herself, with top billing in some of the best halls in London, but things take a new turn for her when Kate Eddowes, her one-time childhood friend turns up, down on her luck. In addition, some monstrous killer is fast making his mark around White Chapel - one who would later become known as Jack the Ripper. Enough said for now - read the book!
I loved the small details the author describes relating to theatres, performers and backstage rivalries. Her accounts of music hall traditions and the use of real characters (Marie Lloyd, Kate Eddowes, The Ripper) lend a real edge to the narrative. The humour throughout, especially, for example, when describing the backstage carry-on of the old music halls, can be laugh out loud. But the grimmer side of life, such as the appalling poverty and the condition of the lower orders of the otherwise "proper" society is equally vivid.
Since we're talking here about the audio version, the sheer drama lent to the book for any reader/listener by the wonderful actress Juanita McMahon is a bonus. McMahon's extraordinary range of accents, intonations and humorous delivery is pitch perfect every time and does the tale full justice.
Laurie Graham is the author of many more historical novels that cover an astonishing range of eras, from long-ago royal families to British women in World War II and even the Kennedys. Certainly, reading "The Night in Question" would make me want to read more.
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