regshoe: A. J. Raffles, leaning back with a straw hat tilted over his face (Raffles)
[personal profile] regshoe
Continuing the Hornung read-through with My Lord Duke (1897), slightly out of order because Gutenberg, my usual source for public domain ebooks, doesn't have Irralie's Bushranger or The Rogue's March: A Romance (both 1896). Happily I have since found Irralie's Bushranger elsewhere and will hopefully be getting to it shortly.

I enjoyed this one, although I don't have a huge amount to say about it. It's another Australian story: this time we open on an aristocratic English family in the midst of a succession crisis over their dukedom, who discover that, as a result of a wayward son of the last generation ending up being banished to the colonies, the new Duke is a random Australian who has lived his whole life in the bush. Many culture-clash hijinks ensue as the Duke (Jack) gets accustomed to his new position and develops feelings for a spirited young English lady... and then the plot starts on a rollercoaster of twists and turns that keep coming right up until the last few pages, by which point the whole set-up has been revealed as something very different indeed.

All of this twisting and turning certainly makes for a fun read, although the whole thing is a bit too melodramatic to take really seriously. It's also notable that this is the... third? fourth? book so far which ends with the sympathetic main characters about to go off and live happily ever after in the bush. Somehow I think Hornung might have missed Australia a little.

I now only have three or four (depending on whether I can find The Rogue's March) books to go before The Amateur Cracksman, so I think I'm going to try and time things so I get to it on the 15th of March.

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