The Turnglass, Gareth Rubin
The Turnglass, Gareth Rubin
List: $34.99 | Sale: $24.50
Club: $17.49

The Turnglass

Author: Gareth Rubin

Narrator: Joe Eyre, George Greenland

Unabridged: 13 hr 25 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/03/2024


Synopsis

This beautifully written, immersive, and unique crime story is a tête-bêche novel—two intertwined stories printed back-to-back. Open the book and the first novella begins. It ends in the middle of the book. Flip the book over, head to tail, and read the second story in the opposite direction. At the book’s core are two separate mysteries running across two different timelines, which are inextricably, forever linked.   1880s, Essex, England: Idealistic young doctor Simeon Lee is called from London to treat his ailing relative Parson Oliver Hawes, who lives in Turnglass House on a bleak island off the coast. Hawes believes he's being poisoned by his sister-in-law, Florence, who was declared mad years ago after killing the parson’s brother in a jealous rage. Hawes keeps her locked in a glass-walled apartment in the Turnglass library; the secret to how she came to be there is found in his tête-bêche journal, where one side tells a very different story from the other.   1930s, Hollywood: Celebrated author Oliver Tooke, the governor’s son, is found dead by apparent suicide. His aspiring actor friend Ken Kourian isn’t so sure Oliver took his own life. He finds a link between Oliver’s death and the mysterious kidnapping of Oliver’s brother when they were children. He also discovers the secret incarceration of Oliver’s mother, Florence, in an asylum. To get to the truth, Ken must decipher clues hidden in Oliver’s final book, a tête-bêche novel called The Turnglass—which is about a young doctor named Simeon Lee . . .?

About Gareth Rubin

Gareth Rubin writes about social affairs, travel, and the arts for British newspapers. In 2013, he directed a documentary about therapeutic art at the Bethlem Royal Hospital in London (Bedlam). His books include The Great Cat Massacre, which details how the course of British history has been changed by people making mistakes; Liberation Square, a thriller set in Soviet-occupied London; and The Winter Agent, a thriller set in Paris in 1944. He lives in London.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Tom on August 20, 2023

This seems like a good idea but the gimmick is ultimately failed by the mediocrity of the story, writing and character development. Like, it's fine, but I found myself rolling my eyes too often and didn't really care what happened. Or if I did care, I'd already guessed the twists miles out.......more

Goodreads review by Selena on June 11, 2023

"You're holding a book in your hands. It's not just any book though. It's a tête-bêche novel, beloved of nineteenth-century bookmakers. It's a book that is two books: two intertwined stories printed back-to-back." The Turnglass is about tête-bêche novels and is one itself. One half of the book is set......more

Goodreads review by Aitziber on July 08, 2024

Libro muy original. Dos historias que al final tienen que ver una con la otra. La parte antigua es la que mas me ha gustado. Un thriller con giro que no esperaba. La parte americana, 1939, se basa en la historia anterior así que vas desgranando la historia basandote en ella. Lo malo de ello, que me......more

Goodreads review by Mangrii on July 10, 2024

Cuando vi que Relojes de cristal se iba a publicar en español me emocione mucho, como fan número uno de los libros un poco extraños y que juegan con los formatos narrativos. La obra de Gareth Rubin prometía dos relatos capicúa, dos historias interconectadas sobre una enigmática familia y dos casas s......more

Goodreads review by bookishcharli on September 02, 2023

I don’t think I’ve ever read a book like this before, where you can simply split it in half and once you’ve read one story you can turn the book upside down and viola, you have another story to read. And we know there’s nothing I love more than stories that intertwine with each other so this was an......more


Quotes

“An intricate and thoroughly mesmerizing tale of family plots and schemes across several generations.”