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write a commentUnder the pseudonym "Rita" E M Gollan wrote some seventy novels of which this is one. It is a rather penetrating book about the supernatural. It starts off with a somewhat unusual situation, at least in literature, with a group of ladies in the turkish bath of a large and luxurious hotel by the sea, in England, the sort of hotel to which people go to be cured of illnesses, on the recommendation of their doctors. It is some time in the late nineteenth century.
An extraordinarily beautiful woman appears one day in the turkish bath, and the women already in there are quite fascinated by her. But there is another guest in the hotel, a Colonel Estcourt, who, it turns out had known this woman since childhood. Indeed it had been expected that they would one day wed, but instead she had gone off and married an elderly, but fabulously wealthy, Russian prince.
Various demonstrations of her occult powers make the guests, both men and women, realise that the beautiful Princess is someone with very special gifts, which one or two of them would like to learn more about. But in the very process of the ensuing teach-in, more things happen than had been bargained for, and both the Colonel and the Princess end up lifeless. The Mystery deepens.
If you like this sort of thing it is a very good novel, but if you are not happy to read about the occult, you should leave it severely alone.
Eliza Margaret Jane Gollan, a British author, wrote some 78 books under the pseudonym RITA, in capitals. She lived from 1850 to 1938 (January 1st), so she comes out of European Union copyright at the beginning of 2009. She married twice (Humphreys and von Booth). For a short time she also used the pseudonym "E Jayne Gilbert".
Show moreUnder the pseudonym "Rita" E M Gollan wrote some seventy novels of which this is one. It is a rather penetrating book about the supernatural. It starts off with a somewhat unusual situation, at least in literature, with a group of ladies in the turkish bath of a large and luxurious hotel by the sea, in England, the sort of hotel to which people go to be cured of illnesses, on the recommendation of their doctors. It is some time in the late nineteenth century.
An extraordinarily beautiful woman appears one day in the turkish bath, and the women already in there are quite fascinated by her. But there is another guest in the hotel, a Colonel Estcourt, who, it turns out had known this woman since childhood. Indeed it had been expected that they would one day wed, but instead she had gone off and married an elderly, but fabulously wealthy, Russian prince.
Various demonstrations of her occult powers make the guests, both men and women, realise that the beautiful Princess is someone with very special gifts, which one or two of them would like to learn more about. But in the very process of the ensuing teach-in, more things happen than had been bargained for, and both the Colonel and the Princess end up lifeless. The Mystery deepens.
If you like this sort of thing it is a very good novel, but if you are not happy to read about the occult, you should leave it severely alone.
Eliza Margaret Jane Gollan, a British author, wrote some 78 books under the pseudonym RITA, in capitals. She lived from 1850 to 1938 (January 1st), so she comes out of European Union copyright at the beginning of 2009. She married twice (Humphreys and von Booth). For a short time she also used the pseudonym "E Jayne Gilbert".
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