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Mark Gatiss - The Vesuvius Club (Lucifer Box 1)

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Mark Gatiss The Vesuvius Club (Lucifer Box 1)

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Heaping Spoonfuls of Praise for Mark Gatiss, Lucifer Box, and The Vesuvius Club

With its quaint dust jacket and Beardsely-inspired illustrations, the book feels like a visitor from a more elegant era; it has the smell of fin de sicle about it. [Lucifer Box] belongs to a lineage which stretches from Sherlock Holmes to the indestructible James Bond, via the queasy phantasmagoria of Sax Rohmers Fu Manchu stories. But Gatiss is more than a pasticheur; he has ambitions beyond literary ventriloquism. Midway through the story, Box is revealed to be bisexual, and we feel that this is a novel which Doyle, Stevenson, and Rider Haggard would not have been allowed to write. Giddily inventive and packed with delirious incident, it suggests a postmodern project comparable to Michael Fabers The Crimson Petal and the White .

The Times Literary Supplement (London)

Gatiss mixes in The League of Gentlemen s penchant for horror with large doses of arch wit and louche laying about. Its Oscar Wilde crossed with H. P. Lovecraft. this could be the bit of fluff youve been looking for.

The Telegraph (London)

Its Gatisss impeccable lightness of touch and huge delight in wordplay that makes this a joy. Studded with epigrams, asides, such wonderful names as Strangeways Pugg and Everard Supple, this is a wickedly written romp to put a smile on the face of anyone amused by the strange alchemy of the words a peculiar horror of artichokes.

SFX magazine (U.K.)

Plenty of sly comic detail (Box lives at Number 9 Downing Street because someone has to) and a surrealist narrative that fans of The League of Gentlemen will recognizekidnapped scientists, poisonous centipedes, foggy chases through London by hackney cab, and a fiendish volcano-based conspiracy that provides the big SFX climax. Its all great fun.

Time Out (London)

The preposterous Lucifer is an entertaining hero and The Vesuvius Club is a hugely enjoyable romp.

Image magazine (U.K.)

Self-deprecatingly subtitled A Bit of Fluff Gatisss prose is upholstered in a rather superior grade of fluff: redolent of soft leather chairs in fine gentlemens establishments, and the cracking of whips in the basements beneath them. Set amid the decadent fleshpots of the Edwardian demimonde, the novel introduces the raffish toast of London society, Lucifer Box, leading portraitist of the age and undercover agent on behalf of His Majestys government. Box works his way dandyishly through a sequence of adventures which leads him to penetrate a secret Neapolitan crime ring, plus the willing rings of several secretive Neapolitans. perniciously addictive piece of escapism.

The Guardian (London)

Lucifer Box, society darling and spy, investigates the secret Vesuvius Club. Brilliant stuff.

Heat magazine (U.K.)

In the appallingly appealing Lucifer Box, Mark Gatiss has created an antihero for the ages. Watching the number of chapters, then pages, dwindle, was heartrending. No one has ever combined the seedy, the stylish, the rumbustious, the raffish, the egregious, the outrageous, the high, and the low with such wit and grace.

Stephen Fry, author of Revenge and The Liar

Mark Gatiss has brought his customary wit and outlandish style to the page sharp, witty and shocking.

Derby Evening Telegraph (U.K.)

The kind of book that breaks the rules and gets away with it on the wings of genial invention and flawless executionwonderfully oddball If youre the kind of person who laughs at phrases like I have a peculiar horror of artichokes or, when describing London, It smelled of roasting excrement, why then, I believe youve found your next purchase.

Rick Kleffel, The Agony Column

If youre going to have humorous pastiche, give me this any day, with its evocations of Edwardian melodrama and derring-do.

The Daily Times (London)

Mark Gatisss debut novel is everything you would expect from one of The League of Gentlemen . Darkly funny and scintillatingly shocking an array of weird and wonderfully entertaining characters living in a colorful past that is painted vividly by Gatiss In Lucifer Box Gatiss has created a true rival to James Bonda quintessential spy with the wit of Oscar Wilde and the detective skills of Sherlock Holmes.

Bristol Evening Post (England)

A breathless caper Although its humbly subtitled A Bit of Fluff it far more resembles the kind of monster fur ball youd find lurking beneath the bed in a seaside hotel. A stylishly published volume.

The Observer (London)

Gatisss delight in this fast-paced pastiche is obvious, his tone slyly knowing, packed with puns as he fleshes out his harum-scarum plot with a host of brilliantly bizarre baddies and goodies. Yes the adventure is ridiculous, but its all the more decadently louche for it.

The Daily Mail (London)

SCRIBNER 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York NY 10020 This book is a work of - photo 1

Picture 2

SCRIBNER
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright 2004 by Mark Gatiss
Illustrations by Ian Bass

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

First published in Great Britain in 2004 by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd.
Published by arrangement with Simon & Schuster UK Ltd.

SCRIBNER and design are trademarks of Macmillan Library Reference USA, Inc., used under license by Simon & Schuster, the publisher of this work.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

ISBN: 0-7432-9119-0

Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com

For Ian

My love, my life

Acknowledgements

Huge thanks to Ian Bass, John Jarrold (who lit the first Lucifer), Clayton Hickman, Darren Nash and my editor Ben Ballhonorary English gentleman.

Mr Lucifer Box Entertains

I HAVE always been an appalling judge of character. It is my most beguiling virtue.

What, then, did I make of the Honourable Everard Supple whose likeness I was conjuring on to canvas in my studio that sultry July evening?

He was an imposing cove of sixty-odd, built like a pugilist, who had made a fortune in the diamond mines of the Cape. His declining years, hed told me during the second sittingwhen a client begins to thaw a mitewere to be devoted entirely to pleasure, principally in the gaming houses of the warmer and naughtier parts of Europe. A portrait, in his opinion (and his absence), would be just the thing to hang over the vast baronial fireplace in the vast baronial hall he had recently lavished a hundred thou upon.

The Supples, it has to be said, were not amongst the oldest and most distinguished families in the realm. Only one generation back from the Honourable Everard had been the less than honourable Gerald who had prospered only tolerably in a manufactory of leather thumb-braces. Son and heir had done rather better for himself and now to add to the title (of sorts) and the fake coat of arms being busily prepared across town he had his new portrait. This, he told me with a wheezy chuckle, would convey the required air of old-world veracity. And if my painting were any good (that hurt ), perhaps I might even be interested in knocking up a few carefully aged canvases of his ancestors?

Supple blinked repeatedly, as was his habit, one lid lingering over his jade-irised glass eye (the left one) as I let myself imagine him tramping into the studio in doublet and hose, all in the name of family honour.

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