Retrato do autor

Gillian White (1)

Autor(a) de Unhallowed Ground

Para outros autores com o nome Gillian White, ver a página de desambiguação.

Gillian White (1) foi considerado como pseudónimo de Georgina Fleming.

20 Works 565 Membros 19 Críticas 1 Favorited

Obras por Gillian White

Foram atribuídas obras ao autor também conhecido como Georgina Fleming.

Unhallowed Ground (1998) 90 exemplares
The Witch's Cradle (2000) 70 exemplares
The Sleeper (1998) 52 exemplares
Night Visitor (2001) 49 exemplares
Copycat (2004) 44 exemplares
Refuge (2002) 39 exemplares
Veil of Darkness (1999) 39 exemplares
Mothertime (1995) 30 exemplares
Rich Deceiver (1992) 28 exemplares
The Beggar Bride (1996) 19 exemplares
Dogboy (1995) 19 exemplares
The Plague Stone (1989) 16 exemplares
Nasty Habits (1995) 16 exemplares
The Crow Biddy (1994) 15 exemplares
Chain Reaction (1997) 15 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female

Membros

Críticas

Overall an enjoyable read, not as tense or spine-tingling as I had hoped but enough mystery and atmosphere to keep me enthralled.
 
Assinalado
jhullie | 1 outra crítica | Mar 20, 2018 |
While I liked another of White's novels enough to buy this one (thankfully on sale) I'm not finishing it. Ange is a slimy loser who has made her own unsatisfactory life and has the idea that she deserves Fabian's money. White didn't even try to make up a reason that could be remotely justifiable. Ange had an opportunity to do better in life, but she knew her choices were bad and I'm sick of hearing her whine about them. Plus there's no way she could pull off a fake this convincing with a family like Fabians and as if he'd marry her without an iron-clad pre-nup. Oy vey. DNF it is.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Bookmarque | Mar 15, 2018 |
A great idea. The three unlikely women escaping from their very different lives to be thrown together first by the necessity of working in a hotel in Cornwall. Then secondly by the plot to steal an old book and (with a little updating) to present it to the world as their own work. Unfortunately, the bizarre circumstances and the characters themselves did not come across as believable enough to do justice to the basic idea.
 
Assinalado
Jawin | 1 outra crítica | Jul 15, 2017 |
Barry and Cheryl are a young, desperately poor couple, who get picked to appear in a reality television series about poverty in Britain. Initially, they are taken to the hearts of the public, but predictably the tide of opinion turns – fuelled by a ruthless tabloid press – and they find themselves reviled, hated and scared to show their faces in public. And then their three children are kidnapped, and events take a truly monstrous turn.

This book sums up so much about why I generally detest reality television. Such programmes can be exploitative and cruel, making heroes and villains out of ordinary, often vulnerable people. Barry and Cheryl think that all their dreams will come true by appearing on this programme – and for a while it seems that they are right – but the media care little about them, and encourage the public to vent all their hatred on this young couple, determined to show them as irresponsible and greedy dole-scroungers (if this all sounds familiar, it’s probably because there are programmes that do EXACTLY this, although this book predates many of the current crop of such shows). The venom with which they are treated – and it is mainly aimed at Cheryl, rather than Barry – is breathtaking and disgusting.

The twists and turns come thick and fast, and at times I was not sure who or what to believe. As the public animosity takes its toll on Cheryl, her thoughts become confused and a sense of paranoia creeps in. I found the story utterly compelling, although in many ways it was not at all enjoyable. It was all too believable, and quite accurately reflected how people are worshipped or reviled as a result of their appearance on programmes like the fictional one in this book ‘The Dark End of the Street’ – yet they are not really prepared or equipped to deal with such strong feelings from a public who don’t really know anything of them, other than how the programme makers manipulate their appearances on television.

My only real criticism of the book would be the final two pages. The story is completed by then, and these last couple of pages feel like a clumsily tacked-on, and unnecessary epilogue. Other than that though, it’s a gripping thriller which can make for uncomfortable reading.
… (mais)
½
1 vote
Assinalado
Ruth72 | 3 outras críticas | Feb 11, 2014 |

Listas

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Estatísticas

Obras
20
Membros
565
Popularidade
#44,255
Avaliação
½ 3.3
Críticas
19
ISBN
154
Línguas
3
Marcado como favorito
1

Tabelas & Gráficos