Author picture

Roderick Anscombe

Author of The Secret Life of Laszlo, Count Dracula

4 Works 799 Members 15 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Roderick Anscombe

The Secret Life of Laszlo, Count Dracula (1994) 573 copies, 10 reviews
The Interview Room (2005) 107 copies, 3 reviews
Shank (1996) 67 copies
Virgin Lies: A Novel (2007) 52 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1947
Gender
male
Education
University of Oxford
Occupations
physician (psychiatrist)
Assistant clinical professor, Harvard Medical School
Nationality
England
UK
Birthplace
Manchester, England, UK
Places of residence
Manchester, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
Manchester, England, UK

Members

Reviews

15 reviews
I must say that I have mixed feelings about this book. It is well written and feels real, although in places strangely out of context and anachronistic (as already noted by other reviewers) All in all I did enjoy the book and it was even more interesting to read since I knew beforehand that the author is a trained psychiatrist. You do get the feeling and understanding what a person of this nature thinks. The author does not try to explain the actions of the protagonist. A wise decision in my show more view and one that added to the impact of the events and dialog. It created an eerie quality to the narrative.

The problem that the language was clearly not of the period did not disturb me as much as a number of anachronisms. For example, one of the characters comments that the murders resemble that committed by Jack the Ripper. According to the journal this was said in April 1888, whilst the actual murders occurred in the fall of that same year. The only reason I bring this up is because the writer is an academic and I would expect more from such a person. Maybe this was corrected in the final version and what I noticed was only a result of the fact that I read an advanced readers copy.
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Eloquent. That’s just the perfect description for this story and the way it’s written. Having never read Dracula, I think this is a great insight to his world. I truly genuinely enjoyed the book for its different perspective. Most books that usually get into a character and make him grow with the reader usually lose interest at one point of their life. But the author kept each time period very well put together. I think it’s a great novel not for the mystery but the slow descent into show more the character of Dracula. Yeah, emphasis on the slow because the character himself can’t tell he’s becoming the monster until quite the very end. So I recommend this book to all those lovers of quiet suspense books, not necessarily vampires or mystery novel fans because that’s not the main plot of the story. I doubt the new vampire fans would enjoy this book, by all means try it out because it sure surprised me. I’m tempted to give this book a solid 5/5 because I seriously can’t think of anything negative for this book. Well, 4.5/5 because it was a tad longer than expected and didn’t have a lot of gruesome scenes as the other reviews have suggested (hey girl’s gotta have some horror in her books, hehe). show less
Eloquent. That’s just the perfect description for this story and the way it’s written. Having never read Dracula, I think this is a great insight to his world. I truly genuinely enjoyed the book for its different perspective. Most books that usually get into a character and make him grow with the reader usually lose interest at one point of their life. But the author kept each time period very well put together. I think it’s a great novel not for the mystery but the slow descent into show more the character of Dracula. Yeah, emphasis on the slow because the character himself can’t tell he’s becoming the monster until quite the very end. So I recommend this book to all those lovers of quiet suspense stories, not necessarily vampires or mystery novel fans because that’s not the main plot of the story. I doubt the new vampire fans would enjoy this book, by all means try it out because it sure surprised me. I’m tempted to give this book a solid 5/5 because I seriously can’t think of anything negative for this book. Well, 4.5/5 because it was a tad longer than expected and didn’t have a lot of gruesome scenes as the other reviews have suggested (hey girl’s gotta have some horror in her books, hehe).

http://incompletetales.tumblr.com/pos...
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Sort of Robin Cook meets Tom Harris. The lead character is a psychiatrist and much of the action/plot is in medical settings; the other half is a thriller set in institutions or police stations--the doctor is also a profiler. I thought this had good pace but was not written as suspensefully as a Grisham. This is not a heavy book but was fairly well crafted and although it deals with some heavy topics was not a downer.
½

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Statistics

Works
4
Members
799
Popularity
#31,914
Rating
3.2
Reviews
15
ISBNs
51
Languages
9

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