Description
Max Pemberton’s Mr. Rowl belongs to the energetic tradition of late-Victorian and Edwardian popular fiction, where intrigue, social observation, and romantic adventure converge. Centred on a memorable title figure whose presence unsettles the lives around him, the novel displays Pemberton’s gift for swift plotting, theatrical revelation, and polished journalistic prose. Its literary context is the world of magazine serials and circulating-library fiction, in which suspense and moral drama were crafted for alert, eager readers. Pemberton himself was exceptionally well placed to write such a work. A Birmingham-born novelist and journalist, educated in the culture of letters and deeply involved in the periodical press, he understood both the mechanics of storytelling and the appetites of a broad reading public. His career as editor, critic, and author of adventure romances gave him a keen sense of pace, character, and topical atmosphere, qualities that inform Mr. Rowl throughout. This book is recommended to readers interested in popular English fiction at the turn of the twentieth century, especially those who value narrative momentum, urbane mystery, and the pleasures of a writer thoroughly at home in the art of suspenseful entertainment.






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