Thursday, 27 November 2014

First Impression Journal by Deborah Anderson

The novel The Woman In White by Wilkie Collins is a classic, cryptic, fiction indited in the 1860s. Judging on the book's denomination, i was expecting a frighteningly eerie or thriller theme in the very beginning of the novel. Instead, the novel is more of a peculiar love story. The plot is that a man Walter Hartright meets a woman dressed in white and ascertained that she escaped from a  asylum to pass a message along to an inscrutable baronet.  Albeit Hartright avails her to elude without being caught and he never expects to visually perceive her again, somehow he cannot forget about her. In my opinion, Collins made the book very perplexing because he did not make it clear what the characters were doing and why they were doing it. I dislike the novel because it shows lack of suspense. nothing fascinating occurred which made me lose interest immediately. however; Walter accumulates information in the form of letters and journal ingresses  about events that the characters have witnessed unique way. Although Walter utilizes a unique way to indite this novel, i still find it boring. i additionally feel like this book requires patience considering the book is 500 pages long. I believe the novel is only prosperous in giving inscrutable effect but it has lack of suspense. Overall, I believe this novel is one of the boringest books i have ever read. as i read more, i hope that the story will become more engaging as i read further to discover incipient events.

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