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The Quick by Lauren Owen

The Quick

by Lauren Owen

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  • Published:
  • Jun 2014, 544 pages
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There are currently 37 member reviews
for The Quick
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  • Vicki R. (York, PA)
    Darkly entertaining!
    In "The Quick" by Lauren Owen, I was immediately drawn in by the characters. I sympathized with James and quickly was rooting for things to go his way. Although as the story moves along, more and more characters are introduced and the true plot is revealed, which may be surprising to readers that were expecting just a Victorian novel. The book is fairly quick paced and easy to read. There is a lot of background information but I felt that added to the story. I enjoyed reading "The Quick" and would recommend it to readers who enjoy a more dark and gothic novel.
  • Estella P. (New York, NY)
    The Quick by Lauren Owen
    Set near the end of the Victorian era, this novel is a love story, a Gothic tale, a detailed historical novel, a memoir via a diary and a maze because it changes directions so often that you never really know where you are going or where you will come out – all of this adds to the overall mystic of the story.
    Siblings Charlotte and James Norbury grew up on an aging estate in the English countryside. With a deceased mother and a virtually absent father, they were raised mostly by servants and a distant relative, and left to their own devices. As the estate and their family's financial position declined, they were free to pursue their own lives which, after Oxford, ultimately leads James to London where he decides to pursue poetry as a career. He shares rooms with Christopher Paige, a wealthy young aristocrat who, unlike James, is quite at home in society. James lives vicariously through his adventures and Christopher's life style inspires James' writing and leads him to reluctantly experience society life. When James finds love in an unexpected place, and it inspires him to begin writing a play, he participates in a life changing event that completely alters his life and leads to his disappearance. Charlotte, in her search for her brother in London, experiences the unexplained, including the mysterious Aegolius Club, one of the darkest secrets of Victorian London, and meets one of the eeriest and strangest cast of characters in literature. The surprise ending and the true nature of the book are both elements that the readers need to experience on their own.

    This book is not for the squeamish or for those who are not fans of Gothic tales.
  • Carol F. (Lake Linden, MI)
    Different story well written
    This is a beautifully written book full of rich phrases that make you want to keep reading. When the author is describing the closing of James and Charlotte's childhood home she writes "it was as if their lives were a pencil line drawn on a piece of paper and someone had followed behind erasing the line as they went".

    The author has the ability to make you feel like you are standing there on a London street corner or sitting in a Victorian parlor with her vivid descriptions.

    The one unfavorable comment I have is that so many characters are introduced as the book progresses and are referred to alternately by their first or last names that it makes it somewhat confusing to keep them all straight.
  • Peggy K. (San Diego, CA)
    Shadows
    This is a rather long story that doesn't get to its main plotline for some chapters. For myself it was simply too slow. On the plus side characterization is very well defined and in that it is a bit like reading Dickens. I like a good mystery and this one has an interesting take on an old story but I felt it took too long to get there.

    Readers of Anne Rice will enjoy this tale an book clubs may find it useful to throw out a discussion about the differences in these two authors.

    I would recommend this book to older readers who enjoy such detailed writing and a slow work up to the actual story.
  • Barbara O. (Maryland Heights, MO)
    Victorian London
    "The Quick" is written in Dickensian style cleverly written, revealing itself to the reader in layers. The author captures the period with it's class levels and social strictures keeping the reader's interest and slowly telling the story of what happened to James Norbury. London is a mysterious place with unexplained events happening not just on it's dark and dirty alleyways.
  • CB (Michigan)
    The Quick
    I enjoy a good Gothic novel and this didn't disappoint, I was actually surprised by the supernatural/paranormal twist in it (something I am not normally drawn to) and the ending was a little disappointing to me - will there be a sequel? At times it was hard to follow and it was a little too long with not enough character development (quite a few -perhaps too many). Nonetheless it is worth the read. Good debut novel by Ms. Owen.
  • Linda P. (Medford, WI)
    Not Just Another Vampire Story
    This was an atmospheric Victorian novel with all the glitter & decay of that time period, but revolving around the vampire society. THE QUICK was a fast & entertaining read. Definitely a good debut! I could not fault the ending. Ms. Owen-----another, please!

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