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The Stranger House (Unabridged)
 
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The Stranger House (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Reginald Hill (Author), Gordon Griffin (Narrator)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 16 hours and 31 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Whole Story Audio Books
  • Audible Release Date: 11 Sep 2006
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQ683W
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
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Product Description

For years, the Stranger House has stood in the village of Illthwaite, offering refuge to travellers. People like Sam, a brilliant young mathematician, who believes that anything that can't be explained by maths isn't worth explaining. And Miguel, a historian running from a priests' seminary, who sees ghosts. Sam is an experienced young woman, Miguel a 26-year-old virgin. But both want to dig up bits of the past that some people would rather keep buried. As they uncover intertwining tales of murder, betrayal, and love, they must put aside their differences to find the dark mysteries at the heart of this ancient place.
©2006 Reginald Hill; (P)2006 W F Howes Ltd

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On July 8th, 1992, a small girl woke up in her bed in her family house in the Australian state of Victoria and knew exactly who she was. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
59 of 60 people found the following review helpful
By Lawyeraau HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
This is a marvelous and beautifully realized work of fiction. As someone who enjoys mysteries, as well as historical fiction and gothic novels of suspense, I was quite taken with this book. Intricately plotted, the book is clever in its premise. Two disparate human beings, a highly independent, red-headed slip of a woman, Samantha Flood, Australian by birth, and a serious, fervently religious Spaniard, Miguel Madero, who is half-English, find themselves thrust together, as each explores the tiny, remote Cumbrian village of Illthwaite in England, looking for answers to their individual quests. Both are in Illthwaite to get information relative to that which each is seeking. Both are staying in the local inn, called The Stranger House.

This book has well-drawn characters that come alive under the author's expert hand. The plot is unusual, as well as complex, containing many layers that the discerning reader will enjoy exploring. Well-written, as well as intricately plotted, this book crosses a number of genres. With its supernatural portents, historical underpinnings, underlying mystery, as well as its gothic type suspense and sensibilities, infused with just a dollop of romance, this book will appeal to those readers who favor these genres. In particular, I found the parts of the book that transcended into historical fiction to be the most compelling. This is not a book for everyone, but to those for whom its themes have inherent appeal, it is a book to be relished.

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80 of 84 people found the following review helpful
By RachelWalker TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Two strangers come to the isolated village of Illthwaite, two strangers with history to explore and secrets to overturn. Sam Flood, a young Australian destined for Cambridge, is searching for information about her grandmother, deported from the village as a child four decades ago. Miguel - Mig - Madero, who became a historian after his flight from a Spanish seminary, has come in search of an ancestor last seen setting sail with the Armada in 1588.

The two first cross-paths staying at The Stranger House, the eerie village Inn that's as hostile as it is hospitable, full of people who conceal as much as they reveal. They do not, at first, hit it off. And here we have our first display of one of the novel's underlying aspects: the conflict between logic, reason (Sam is a mathematician) and spirituality. As the two characters look to seek out and overturn histories long buried, the novel floods with the mystical and mythical, the seemingly inexplicable happenstances of the past, made even worse by the dissonance between what people say occurred and why and the reality. It's only when the two warm to one another that things, for both of them, start to unravel and make sense. Understanding the past, Hill hints, requires an open viewpoint, a mix of filters.

Both strangers in a strange land, their senses of isolation, of being an outsider, are at times extreme. Especially when people are not being straight with them. Outright denial of a person's existence is negated when Sam unearths a gravestone in the local church, complete with the person's engraved name. It's first in a long line of uncovered deceptions. The people of Illthwaite, it is clear, do not want to be open. And those who do wish to be open are suspicious at best. The atmosphere of isolation breeds a hysteric one of danger, of fear.

It's also a book about the nature of community, of belonging. Dark Illthwaite, isolated itself at the base of a valley, sun hidden by undulating hills, clubs together in the face of interrogation, is complicit in silence, and yet must maintain an unnerving façade of friendliness. Appearances, clearly, count for a lot.

The most obvious triumph of this novel? The two protagonists. Frankly, Hill's craft in drawing them is beyond praise. They're vivid, real, human, funny, passionate, and ridiculously engaging. It's a long book, but you're glad that it is, if just to spend it in the company of these vibrant, breathing characters. Hill's flare here is undiminished. The least obvious triumph? The fact that there's nary a crime in sight. This, when the final page is turned, is merely a novel where the characters discover their ancestors, and their own history, their own context, by scrubbing slowly away at the soil of untruths. No murders, no viciously spilled blood. And I only realised that when I'd actually finished the thing. "Wait a second..." my brain went. Hill, it's easy to forget, has been in this game for years, and there's a reason why he's one of the most accomplished crime writers in the world. There's no real crime here, and yet Hill's overflowing talent means there's as much suspense, as much mystery, as much tension and need-to-know-what's-going-on desperation on the part of the reader as there is would be in the first five books of a less experienced practitioner.

There's something that perhaps shouldn't work about this book: the fact that it's full of so very much. One the one hand, it's incredibly clever and learned (Hill displays not just knowledge but understanding of everything from Mathematics to Norse myth) at the same time as being incredibly light and jocular; it's dark and oppressive at the same time as being funny and bawdy; it's so full of characters that brim with neon life; it's so full of history, yet is so grippingly immediate. It's full of stuff, and full of contrasts, and it works at every single level it aims at.

A serious book, it's also hugely enjoyable. This, I think, can be said of all his work, and that is something to be proud of. He's a special writer indeed; there's certainly no one writing books quite like his. A novel wreathed in mystery and myth, soaked with secrets and history, The Stranger House is one of the most unique and remarkable books of the year. Hill deserves several cheers for this.

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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful
A Ripping Yarn 31 July 2005
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I have been a fan of Hill's Dalziel and Pascoe books for some time, and have recently read several of his earlier works, some written while he was honing his craft.
Some of the earlier ones are patchy, but he has got better and better, and The Stranger House is brilliant

The Australian protagonist is perhaps a bit strong, but he has captured the essence of a type of feisty, no-nonsense character that does exist in that country, and she is funny, vulnerable and likeable. He draws on a real historical episode, which has caused enormous distress since it first came to light, and he shows great compassion.
The Spanish Catholic character is also seeking answers about a time of religious fanaticism and the cruelty it engendered, and also has a humanity that easily wins the reader's sympathy.

It is very much a book one reads to find out what happens next, while Hill does not put a foot wrong in his evocation of place and how the morality that exists at different times in history shapes the actions and reactions of people.
Five hundred years ago physical torture was state-sanctioned; as recently as the mid-twentieth century mental torture and sometimes physical abuse was still being inflicted on the helpless in the belief that it was in their best interest

Hill does not preach, but the lessons in the book are powerful and thuoght-provoking.

Above all, it is a ripping yarn, brilliantly told. I loved it.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Fascinating and fluently written
I recently discovered Reginald Hill via audiobooks, and got this for a Kindle read. Overall I very much enjoyed it, Hill's writing is fluent, intelligent, the characters are... Read more
Published 27 days ago by travelling reader
Restored my faith in Mr. Hill
After suffering the unmitigated disaster of "Arms and the Women" I was uncertain whether to spend time and money reading any more by Reginald Hill. Read more
Published 13 months ago by John Nevill
yawwwwwwwwwn
How did this book become a bestseller???? Unbelievably one dimensional characters (even the characters' names made me cringe); dull, dated plot and gappy, awkward dialogue... Read more
Published on 6 Oct 2007 by Ali
Nice plot, not sure about the writing style
I love Daziel & Pascoe on TV and thought I would attempt to read some of Reginald Hill's other work.I felt this book had a great story but I got very lost in the writing style. Read more
Published on 25 Feb 2007 by Mrs. B
A truly great read
This is a brilliant read although it is not a typical crime novel with its "cops and robbers". At times when reading I was reminded of Robert Goddard, another author I rate. Read more
Published on 18 Feb 2007 by johnverp
Excellent
This is the story of two completely contrasting characters whose pasts both lead them to a small English village in search of information, but the local villagers are reluctant to... Read more
Published on 29 May 2006 by BC
Reginald Hill - The Stranger House
Two strangers come to the isolated village of Illthwaite, two strangers with history to explore and secrets to overturn. Read more
Published on 12 April 2006 by RachelWalker
Our Dickens?
I loved The Stranger House. It has a large cast of interesting characters, a relentless plot, and a basis in the author's social outrage at his contemporaries' misconduct toward... Read more
Published on 6 Oct 2005 by Casey B. Rucker
Brilliant
Another stormer from Reginald Hill.
His books just get better and better.
This story of intrigue and historical mystery is a real page-turner with two very different... Read more
Published on 15 Sep 2005 by Book Worm
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