The Woman in White
Wilkie Collins
569 pages
Paperback
Penguin Books
1868
ISBN: 9780140420245
Review
‘There, in the middle of the broad, bright high-road – there, as if it had that moment sprung out of the earth or dropped from the heaven – stood the figure of a solitary Woman, dressed from head to foot in white garments…’
Walter Hartright, walk along a lonely, moonlit road are disrupted by his meeting a distressed figure, clad entirely in white. What seems at first to be a coincidental encounter is placed into uneasy context when Hartright takes up his duties at drawing master to half-sisters Marian Halcombe and the beautiful heiress Laura Fairlie. The thin, worried woman in white will prove to be the link between Laura and those determined to wrest her fortune from her.
‘The Woman in White’ is often cited as one of the first mystery novels and is epistolary fiction at its finest. We go through numerous narrators, Hartright (he must be a goody with a surname like that, right?) most prominent amongst them, with the plot cleverly revealed to us step-by-step.
I read some reviews which stated that the novel was anachronistic and (that least insightful of critiques) ‘boring’. It is certainly of its time, but its being published in serialised format meant that Collins leaves us with a cliffhanger at the end of a chapter more often than not. The plot has a superb macro story arc, with lots of sub-plots for the reader to get their teeth into. I was not in the least bored and I wondered whether it was the book’s relatively lengthy page count which proved prohibitive to some.
The characters are superb, from the no-nonsense Marian and the hypochondriac Frederick Fairlie, to the wonderfully embittered and venomous Mrs Catherick. These are such wonderfully drawn side characters (Marian perhaps does not merit being a side character only) that they threaten to make Walter and Laura seem rather bland by comparison. Our antagonists are also superb – the hot-tempered Sir Percival, the conniving and obsequious Countess Fosco, and the dark and scheming Count Fosco. Battle lines are drawn early in the novel and it is thrilling to watch the chaos ensue.
It being a nineteenth century novel, there is a healthy dose of fainting, turns, and nervous conditions. The novel also perpetuates the theory that a woman in a dress cannot be caught in a rain shower without developing a life-threatening fever. One gets the sense that when ‘The Woman in White’ was written, these were not such ragged tropes, and one happily reads along with the contrivance with this in mind.
To set alongside the fainting, Collins takes us down a less-trodden route – high-born ladies reduced to relative poverty. Hartright, Halcombe, and Fairlie turn slum detectives in a bid to uncover Fosco’s terrible secret, and this makes for the most thrilling part of the book. Hartright ducks and weaves through crowded streets in an attempt to bring the count down, hired thugs only a step behind him.
This is one of the best epistolary novels I’ve read – highly recommended.
*Thanks for reading. Image courtesy of World of Books. Find my other reviews below*
Kevin Barry – The Heart in Winter
George Mackay Brown – A Time to Keep
Robert Winder – Bloody Foreigners
P. G. Wodehouse – Very Good, Jeeves
Michael Palin – Erebus: The History of a Ship
Hilary Mantel – The Mirror and the Light
Samantha Harvey – The Western Wind
Diarmaid MacCulloch – Thomas Cromwell: A Life
Peter Carey – A Long Way from Home
Val McDermid – A Place of Execution
Richard Cohen – How to Write Like Tolstoy
John Sampson – The Wind on the Heath
Jess Smith – Way of the Wanderers
Max Hastings – Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy 1945-1975
Bernard MacLaverty – Grace Notes
Ernest Hemingway – In Our Time
Andrew Roberts – Napoleon the Great
Emily Bronte – Wuthering Heights
Margaret Atwood – The Handmaid’s Tale
Annie Proulx – Brokeback Mountain
Anthony Doerr – All the Light We Cannot See
Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird
Colson Whitehead – The Underground Railroad
Amor Towles – A Gentleman in Moscow
Matthew Richardson is a writer of short stories. His work has featured in Gold Dust magazine, Literally Stories, Close to the Bone, McStorytellers, Penny Shorts, Soft Cartel, Whatever Keeps the Lights On, Flashback Fiction, Cafelit, Best MicroFiction 2021, Writer’s Egg, Idle Ink, The Wild Word, Down in the Dirt, and Shooter magazine. He has a Professional Doctorate in Education. Matthew blogs at www.matthewjrichardson.com.

Nice review, it helped me decide whether I should pick this up or not. Great Job!
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Thanks Christopher. Hopefully tipped it the right way for you!
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Great review, Matthew! I read that book years ago, and I still remember it – v good.
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Glad you enjoyed it as well Chris. I think it would have been really interesting to read it serialised as well.
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That’s a really good idea – on the BBC R4 perhaps?
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100%
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I’ve read this book a couple of times. I love it (as I also do The Moonstone, his other most famous book). I agree with you about the 2 main characters being so much less interesting than everyone else. And I love the characters’ names. I need to do another rereading of both these books I think! They are the kind of books that you can really get lost in!
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I love this warm, fulsome review; you sold the book for me, Matthew: will try to get a copy through my local library ; thanks 🙂
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Highly recommended John 👌
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