Recensione:
'The most delicious, depraved, inventive, macabre and hilarious literary debut I can think of. In the appallingly appealing Lucifer Box, Mark Gatiss has created an anti-hero for the ages. Watching the number of chapters, then pages, dwindle was heart-rending...no one has ever combined the seedy, the stylish, the rumbustious, the raffish, the egregious, the outrageous, the high and the low with such wit and grace. More, I want more!'
Stephen Fry xx
'With its quaint dust jacket and Beardsley-inspired illustrations, the book feels like a visitor from a more elegant era . . . Giddily inventive and packed with delirious incident, it suggests a post-modern project comparable to Michel Faber's pseudo-Dickensian 'The Crimson Petal and the White'. It is easy to imagine Oscar Wilde, on a chaise longue, smoking an absurdly expensive cigarette, reading THE VESUVIUS CLUB and laughing out loud at its playful decadence and wit. There can surely be no higher praise' TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT.
'Self-deprecatingly subtitled "a bit of fluff"...Gatiss's prose is upholstered in a rather superior grade of fluff: redolent of soft leather chairs in fine gentlemen's establishments, and the cracking of whips in the basements beneath them. Set amid the decadent fleshpots of the Edwardian demi-monde, the novel introduces the raffish toast of London society, Lucifer box, leading portraitist of the age and undercover agent on behalf of His Majesty's government. A dandy and a bounder, Box works his way dandyishly through a sequence of adventures which leads him to penetrate a secret Neapolitan crime ring, plus the willing rinfs of several secretive Neapolitans.... perniciously addictive piece of escapism' GUARDIAN 27/11
'An intelligent, spirited book' TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
'A breathless caper set in Edwardian London. Although it's humbly subtitled 'A Bit of Fluff' it far more resembles the kind of monster fur ball you'd find lurking beneath the bed in a seaside hotel...A stylishly published volume...but beneath all the fuzz lies a genuine darkness' OBSERVER
'Gatiss mixes in THE LEAGUE OF GENTLEMEN's penchant for horror with large doses of arch wit and louche laying about. It's Oscar Wilde crossed with H.P. Lovecraft....this could be the bit of fluff you've been looking for' TELEGRAPH
'If you're going to have humorous pastiche, give me this any day, with its evocations of Edwardian melodrama and derring-do' TIMES
'It's Gatiss's impeccable lightness of touch and huge delight in wordplay that makes this a joy. Studded with epigrams, asides, such wonderful names as Strangeways Pugg and Everard Supple, this is a wickedly written romp to put a smile on the face of anyone amused by the strange alchemy of the words "a peculiar horror of artichokes"' SFX MAGAZINE
'An imaginative and riveting read which draws you in to the era and leaves you wishing you didn't have to leave' WATERSTONES BOOKS QUARTERLY
'If you like your adventures rollicking and your heroes camp, then Lucifer Box is your man' OBSERVER 10/7
'Wildean witticisms are mixed with Gothic chills. Added to which is the hero's Bond-like fondness for fine wines, good tailoring and fast women. One only hopes the author can take time out from his League of Gentlemen commitments to write a successor' THE TIMES 9/7
'A delicious slice of decadence from Edwardian England . . . written with dashing charm, knowing humour and rakish wit, let's hope that THE VESUVIUS CLUB is the first of many adventures for Lucifer Box. A dandy of a book' ATTITUDE
L'autore:
Mark Gatiss is one of The League of Gentlemen from the multi-award winning television show, and the author of the hit novels The Vesuvius Club and its sequel The Devil in Amber. He has also written acclaimed radio and television scripts, including episodes of Doctor Who and Poirot. He has a thick comma of hair that will never stay in place and a rather cruel mouth.
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