Showing posts with label Diane Setterfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diane Setterfield. Show all posts

What are you reading? The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

Noelia's contribution

The Book 

Source: Amazon
While going through my reading list, I came across Diane Setterfield's The Thirteenth Tale.

At the heart of the novel are two unforgettable women: Vida Winter, the legendary and reclusive author, and Margaret Lea, a young and reserved biographer called upon to unravel Vida's mysterious past. As their stories intertwine, Margaret delves into a labyrinth of secrets, family mysteries, and chilling revelations that blur the line between reality and fiction.

The opening chapters are a love letter to the world of books, immersing the reader in Margaret's idyllic life with her father, a bibliophile whose secondhand bookstore is a sanctuary of stories and secrets. Amid the musty scent of yellowed pages and whispered tales, Margaret turns her passion for reading into her profession, becoming a renowned biographer.

Another highlight of the novel is its fervent homage to 19th-century Gothic literature, evoking the sombre worlds of the Brontë sisters. Setterfield masterfully conjures an atmosphere thick with apprehension, where something as simple as a house becomes a character in its own right.

Finally, Setterfield skillfully weaves her narrative threads like an expert puppeteer, building tension with every turn of the page. She conceals the devastating truth like a secret whispered in a dark room until the final sentence, when the kaleidoscope of lives is revealed.


The Author

Source: X
Diane Setterfield is a British author born in 1965 in Englefield Green, Surrey, England. She studied French at the University of Bristol and later completed a PhD in 20th-century French literature. Before becoming a novelist, she worked as a university lecturer.

Setterfield achieved international success with her debut novel, The Thirteenth Tale (2006), a Gothic mystery that became a bestseller worldwide. She is known for her atmospheric storytelling, literary style, and themes of memory, identity, and secrets. Other notable works include Once Upon a River (2018).