A Rogue's Life

A Rogue's Life

by Wilkie Collins

Narrated by Bernard Mayes

Unabridged — 5 hours, 19 minutes

A Rogue's Life

A Rogue's Life

by Wilkie Collins

Narrated by Bernard Mayes

Unabridged — 5 hours, 19 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$12.97
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)
$13.95 Save 7% Current price is $12.97, Original price is $13.95. You Save 7%.

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers


Overview

This delightful tale of thwarted ambition and forbidden love follows the adventures and fortunes of an endearing young rogue, Frank Softly. Originally appearing serialized in Household Words in 1859, the rogue is one of Collins' most richly comic creations.

Propelled into society by his ever-hopeful father, Frank is introduced to a variety of professions in order to make his fortune. Not industrious by nature, Frank finds working life a challenge, and by his twenty-fifth birthday, he has failed in medicine, portrait-painting, caricaturing, and even forgery. Disenchanted with life, he despairs of ever finding something to commit to-until he meets Alicia Dulcifer and her inexplicably wealthy father.

Proffering his own take on picaresque storytelling-and with many a grain of truth for twentysomethings today-this is Wilkie Collins at his entertaining best.


Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

A calculating antihero charms his way to wedded bliss and prosperity in this early (1856) novella from the lively pen of the great Victorian melodramatist. Frank Softly, black-sheep son of a hardworking physician (and, in Frank's own words, "probably the most impudent man of my age in all England"), fails to follow his father's professional example, but earns "pocket money" as a caricaturist ("Thersites Junior")-not enough, as he's imprisoned for debt-before turning to portrait painting, then art forgery. During Frank's disgraceful young adulthood, he's banished from his family but given a kind of reprieve contingent on his ability to outlive his grandmother Lady Malkinshaw, an alarmingly hale and hearty beldame who survives more perils and pratfalls than Buster Keaton in his heyday. Repeatedly given employment for which he's spectacularly unqualified, Frank becomes secretary of the snooty Duskydale Institution (of science and literature), where he continues to underachieve, before meeting renegade "chemist" Dr. Dulcifer and his splendiferous daughter Alicia, with whom the rogue is instantly, irretrievably smitten. There is, of course, a mystery surrounding the Dulcifers, and when Frank gains entry to their country estate, he becomes unwittingly involved in the sinister doings of the Bad Doctor (who may be thought of as an early version of The Woman in White's villain par excellence Count Fosco). Collins's genius for clockwork plotting is happily wedded to Frank Softly's racy, urbanely egomaniacal voice, as the Bow Street Runners descend on the Dulcifer domicile, Frank loses and regains Alicia with head-spinning rapidity, and the tale's presumably unhappy denouement in fact metamorphosesinto confirmation of Frank's conviction (so to speak): "Nothing will ever persuade me that Society has not a sneaking kindness for a Rogue."A neglected gem: one of Collins's most enticing fictions, and one of Hesperus Press's happiest rediscoveries.

From the Publisher

"A neglected gem: one of Collins's most enticing fictions, and one of Hesperus Press's happiest rediscoveries."  —Kirkus Reviews

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169805703
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 01/01/2006
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews