The moonstone

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The moonstone (2009, Signet Classics)

561 pages

English language

Published Jan. 8, 2009 by Signet Classics.

ISBN:
978-0-451-53122-3
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5 stars (2 reviews)

The Moonstone was published in 1868 and concerns the huge yellow diamond of the title that was once stolen from an Indian shrine. Rachel Verrinder receives the stone as a gift and does not realize that it has been passed to her in a sinister form of revenge by John Herncastle who, it transpires, acquired the moonstone by means of murder and theft. The jewel also brings bad luck. The stone disappears on the very night it is given to Rachel, though, and the tale concerns the unveiling of the culprit after the intervention of Sergeant Cuff, a famous London detective. A maid who is under suspicion commits suicide and Rachel herself seems reticent when it comes to aiding the investigation. Mysterious Indians appear frequently and there is an air of confusion and the unknown until the mystery is eventually solved.

145 editions

A true sensation!

4 stars

Re-read for my lecture on mid-Victorian representations of colonial India this past week, and let me tell you that The Moonstone is everything that your Victorianist friends have been talking about for ages. By the time you're through Gabriel Betteredge's narrative, you are hooked! There is no escaping. My favourite scene (obviously): Opium and the re-enactment! The novel is also the origin point for many of detective fiction's foundational tropes: bunging local policeman, prodigal brooding city cop, poor maid with the stained dress wrongly accused for the crime, digressive polyvocal narrative, the found document, and so on!

Subjects

  • Young women -- England -- Fiction
  • Diamonds -- India -- Fiction
  • Jewelry theft -- Fiction
  • Upper class -- England -- Fiction
  • East Indians -- England -- Fiction