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The White Devil: A Novel [Hardcover]

Justin Evans
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (68 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 10, 2011

Set in a four-hundred-year-old boys' boarding school in London, a chilling gothic thriller by the author of the critically acclaimed A Good and Happy Child . . .

A fierce and jealous ghost . . .

A young man's fight for his life . . .

The Harrow School is home to privileged adolescents known as much for their distinctive dress and traditions as for their arrogance and schoolboy cruelty. Seventeen-year-old American Andrew Taylor is enrolled in the esteemed British institution by his father, who hopes that the school's discipline will put some distance between his son and his troubled past in the States.

But trouble—and danger—seem to follow Andrew. When one of his schoolmates and friends dies mysteriously of a severe pulmonary illness, Andrew is blamed and is soon an outcast, spurned by nearly all his peers. And there is the pale, strange boy who begins to visit him at night. Either Andrew is losing his mind, or the house legend about his dormitory being haunted is true.

When the school's poet-in-residence, Piers Fawkes, is commissioned to write a play about Byron, one of Harrow's most famous alumni, he casts Andrew in the title role. Andrew begins to discover uncanny links between himself and the renowned poet. In his loneliness and isolation, Andrew becomes obsessed with Lord Byron's story and the poet's status not only as a literary genius and infamous seducer but as a student at the very different Harrow of two centuries prior—a place rife with violence, squalor, incurable diseases, and tormented love affairs.

When frightening and tragic events from that long-ago past start to recur in Harrow's present, and when the dark and deadly specter by whom Andrew's been haunted seems to be all too real, Andrew is forced to solve a two-hundred-year-old literary mystery that threatens the lives of his friends and his teachers—and, most terrifyingly, his own.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Want a good English ghost story to read by the fire on a cold winter night? [The White Devil] gathers you in lovingly, then takes you in a strangler’s grip with its escalating horrors.” (Stephen King, Entertainment Weekly (2011 Pop Culture Favorites) )

“Demonic possession, the provocative topic of Justin Evans’s first novel, A Good and Happy Child, takes on a literary twist and a sexual jolt in The White Devil. . . . Evans heaps an assortment of gothic embellishments onto this coming-of-age narrative.” (New York Times Book Review )

“Chilling-to-the-bone. . . . Deliciously frightening, The White Devil is a literary scare story in an earlier tradition before vampires ruled the day, or at least the genre.” (New York Daily News )

“[An] ingenious and creepy supernatural thriller, will give you chills even in the summer heat. Evans has fused a literary mystery, sinister ghost story and Gothic romance with the story of a boy’s intellectual and sexual awakening.” (Kansas City Star )

“Evans ratchets up the suspense at an expert pace. . . . The White Devil [is] an authentic page-turner that may well be devoured in one sitting.” (Shelf Awareness )

“[An] ingenious and creepy supernatural thriller, will give you chills even in the summer heat. Evans has fused a literary mystery, sinister ghost story and Gothic romance with the story of a boy’s intellectual and sexual awakening.” (The Tuscon Citizen )

“[A] crackling literary mystery. . . . Harrow itself contains Shirley Jackson levels of gloomy passages and dark secrets. Smart, scary, sexy, and gorgeously written to boot.” (Booklist (starred review) )

“Gripping. . . . [A] disturbing gothic thriller.” (Publishers Weekly (starred review) )

The White Devil is an intelligent, bristling ghost story with a stunning sense of place, a uniquely frightful spirit, and a band of absolutely charming heroes—Byronic and otherwise. You’ll dread reaching the end-while flipping the pages furiously.” (Gillian Flynn, author of Sharp Objects and Dark Places )

The White Devil is a page-turning tour de force. Both a thoughtful and learned homage to the ghost story, and a clever and compelling rethinking of the genre, this is an amazing, frightening, and believable novel. I loved it.” (David Liss, author of The Devil's Company )

The White Devil is part ghost story, part murder mystery, part coming-of-age tale, part romance. It’s a delightful cocktail. Justin Evans’ writing is crisp, his storytelling vigorous, his sense of the uncanny pitch perfect. And he’s written a wonderfully creepy book.” (Scott Smith, author of A Simple Plan and The Ruins )

From the Back Cover

Sex, Death, and Boarding School

When seventeen-year-old Andrew Taylor is transplanted from his American high school to a British boarding school—the English, hypertraditional, all-boys Harrow School—he finds his past mistakes following him, with an added element of horror: visions of a pale, white-haired boy from Harrow's past. Either Andrew is losing his mind, or the house legend about his dormitory being haunted is true.

When one of his schoolmates dies mysteriously of a severe pulmonary illness, Andrew is blamed and spurned by nearly all his peers. In his loneliness and isolation, Andrew becomes obsessed with Lord Byron's story and the poet's status not only as a literary genius and infamous seducer but also as a student at the very different Harrow of two centuries ago—a place rife with violence, squalor, incurable diseases, and tormented love affairs.

When frightening and tragic events from that long-ago past start to recur in Harrow's present, and Andrew's haunting begins to seem all too real, he is forced to solve a two-hundred-year-old mystery that threatens the lives of his friends and his teachers—and, most terrifyingly, his own.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Harper; 1St Edition edition (May 10, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9780061728273
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061728273
  • ASIN: 0061728276
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (68 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #303,788 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Justin Evans is a digital media executive based in New York City where he lives with his family. He received a BA in English from Columbia University and a MBA in Finance from NYU Stern. His first novel, A Good and Happy Child, was named a Best Book of 2007 by the Washington Post, was translated into six languages, and optioned by a major film studio. Justin attended Harrow School for one year at the end of the eighties.

Write to Justin at justin@justinevans.com.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining gothic mystery June 12, 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
I did enjoy this novel by Justin Evans but must start off by saying I in no way found it a gothic thriller as it is being described. Thriller leads the reader to think of it being scary and a page turner with much suspense. This is not what this book is about. Not to knock it at all. The gothic genre is achieved with high colors. Evans is a very good intelligent author and he sets the backdrop of England and the brooding boarding school Harrow School so well it leaps from the pages and comes to life. He is comfortable with the gothic genre and setting from page one till the end. The story is about American student Andrew Taylor who is sent to the school as a last resort by his father. He was kicked out of many schools in America for his behaviour and Harrow School is his last chance. The novel grabbed me from the beginning with the intense atmosphere, well defined characters and quick fast paced plot. The story moved quickly and right off the bat there is a murder. An added aspect to the plot is Andrew getting involved in a play about poet Byron who was a student at the school. He bears a strong resemblance to him physically and this is an important part of the story. Other main characters are Piers Hawkes, the house master who is also a past his time poet and drunk plus Persephone, the only female student at the school. Piers is the author of the play about Byron and Persephone the female lead.

But from here on the pace of the novel slows down as the ghost story unfolds. The first appearances of the ghost rang very true and I was at the edge of my seat. It was creepy and spellbinding. Andrew is the recipient of these visions and I expected a novel with ever increasing suspense and dread as the ghost made its presence stronger. In other words a great gothic thriller. But instead the book becomes a mystery into why the ghost is presenting itself, who the ghost is and what does it ultimately want. The search is on with our main characters to solve this but suspense and anticipation for the reader is gone. Andrew's thought process dealing with this throughout the book does make sense and works well for well. Persephone also rings true. But headmaster Piers just gets away with many actions at the school while still holding his job that I find unbelievable. There are a few other main characters that pop up but most characters become sidelines. The novel does move along smoothly but a thriller it is not. It's a good read but not one that keeps you up hours. It took me time to get through this one.

Justin Evans is a very intelligent author and the gothic atmosphere is superb. The basis of the story is also very intriguing but as it unfolds it does not have much suspense or apprehension for the reader. The ending is satisfying but for me it was a big opportunity lost as the ghost and the sequences involving it became plot points and not suspenseful arcs of the story. The mystery aspect does work well though and answers are explained well as the novel wraps itrself up. I can recommend this novel but not as a gothic thriller. If a thriller is what you expect you will be let down. But for an atmospheric gothic mystery with well drawn charaters this book works well.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Lovely, Literate Gothic Thriller! June 5, 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
For as long as I can remember I've been a sucker for gothic thrillers, especially those set at British boarding schools. There's so much potential there - the ancient school buildings, the fog-shrouded landscapes, the sense of history frozen in time, the wafting hint of repression and unnatural obsessions. Alas, despite all that potential, no example of the genre has ever lived up to my melodramatic expectations. Either they're so poorly written that it's an effort not to gag at the overworked metaphors and lame cliches, or else they devolve into a climax so anticlimactic and silly that I find myself thinking: "Really? I've read all this way, and that's all you've got?"

And then, finally, a book that delivers the goods! White Devil is a literate, well paced, dense ghost story with characters that engage, writing that absorbs, red herrings so intriguing you'll enjoy being led astray, and a plot that keeps tightening the tension until the final sentences of the story's wholly original, wholly satisfying, wholly creepy denouement.

The story revolves around Andrew Taylor, a 17yr old American boy exiled by his outraged parents to an exclusive English boarding School after scandal and a death force him to flee his school in Connecticut. But the ghosts he's left behind are nothing compared to the ghost waiting for him at Harrow School - a pallid, spectral lad whose soul remains bound to earth by 200-year old cruelties and jealousies. Now add to the mix a bitter, washed-up poet grasping at his last chance to redeem himself; an eerily beautiful but precocious female classmate; White Devil, a bloody revenge tragedy authored by the troubled 19th century playwright John Webster; and rehearsals for a production of the life of the beautiful, scandalous, haunted Lord Byron (a Harrow School alumnus), to whom Andrew bears an uncanny resemblance ... set it all in an ancient boarding school complete with petty (and not so petty) adolescent cruelty, secrets concealed behind crumbling stone, and a string of mysterious deaths that begin soon after Andrew's arrival at Harrow ... stir vigorously, and enjoy losing yourself in a tale that is sure to keep you enthralled until the final paragraphs.

Props to Justin Evans, whose bio reveals no particular literary credentials, for producing this literate gothic thriller. It's not easy to produce extreme characters that don't come off as sterotypical, to create mood/atmosphere that doesn't come off as stagy, to construct a plot so dense that the story never stops delivering chills, and to resist the urge to wrap up the story with a full and pat disclosure that explains all. Evans writes with the mastery of language and assurance of a pro. How fortunate that the idea for this story fell into the hands of someone able to make the most of it!
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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Harrowing? June 18, 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
I chose this book from the Vine selection for a couple reasons: 1.) I'm English and attended an English boarding school (Winchester) before migrating to the colonies. 2.) I seem to be on a Byron kick of late, having recently finished reading his complete letters and diary entries. Author Justin Evans is an American who, like our protagonist Andrew Taylor herein, spent a year at Harrow. There were a few Yanks at Winchester too, so I was interested in how Evans depicted it all. My verdict - It all comes across as rather stock and mediocre, rather what one expects to find than any grand surprises or disclosures.

The book will be best appreciated by those who adore Gothic atmospherics for their own sake and who, as Evans admits in the "essay" on this Amazon page, believe in actual ghosts. Some reviewers, no doubt unduly influenced by Harry Potter, seem troubled by the homosexuality and drugs depicted in the book. Trust me, Evans is not letting you in on the half of it.

Evans plays fast and loose with Byronic scholarship here, which didn't bother me so much. It's a work of fiction, after all. But he does depict Byron as the stereotypical roué most people think of him as rather than the complicated human being that he was. Also, for those interested, John Harness is based on an actual historical figure, John Eccleston, whom Byron mentions in his early letters and for whom he clearly felt some sort of affection. Also, again for those interested, the Latin quotes on the chalkboard are from Virgil's Aeneid, which every six-former must master to graduate. They remain untranslated in the book, so here are my ad hoc translations:

1.) (p. 87 in the ARC) "And from the highest summit the nymphs cried out..."

2.) (p. 175 in the ARC, to which I'm adding the famous line that precedes it, "Facilis descendus Averni :") "It is easy to descend into Hell: Night and day the door stands open to the darkness of Dis."

Dis is the god of the underworld.

My final take on the book is that, in the end, it is in no sense a thriller in the common usage of the word (as other reviewers have noted), nor is it particularly original, but it does, ironically, make for good "comfort reading" on dark and stormy nights with the duvet pulled up over one.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Good Start
Great start to the book but kind of lost its momentum by the end. I enjoyed the incorporation of classic literature into the book, however.
Published 3 months ago by abigail schwepker
2.0 out of 5 stars A schoolboy in a land of buffoons
"It gathers you in lovingly," Stephen King is quoted as saying on the cover of The White Devil. "Then takes you in a strangler's grip with its escalating horrors. Read more
Published 4 months ago by J. Malvern
3.0 out of 5 stars A good read, a good ghost story
I enjoyed this novel about an American at Harrow and a ghost that hails back to the days of Byron. The characters are well drawn and the suspense is maintained. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Diane Irene Garvey
4.0 out of 5 stars Haunting British spook-fest!
Justin Evans has produced a chilling thriller in the tradition of old English spook-fests. He pulls out all stops and it is no coincidence that the privileged school at the center... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Ray J. Palen Jr.
4.0 out of 5 stars muddyboy1
Perhaps I am being a bit lenient with the 4 stars but I did enjoy the book even though I figured out in advance what was going to happen. Read more
Published 8 months ago by muddyboy1
5.0 out of 5 stars My only regret about the work of Justin Evans is that there isn't...
I won't get into a detailed description of the plot of this gothic tale, because so many other reviewers have done it for me. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Washington Court
1.0 out of 5 stars Boring, overwritten, and overwrought -- Save yourselves!
This boring, overwritten, overwrought novel is set in a fancy-pants private school for teenaged boys in the UK, the Harrow School. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Meg Brunner
3.0 out of 5 stars A troubled youth meets another with a vengeful quest in this...
Review courtesy of Dark Faerie Tales

Quick & Dirty: A troubled youth meets another with a vengeful quest in this paranormal thriller. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Dark Faerie Tales
3.0 out of 5 stars Horror Comes To Harrows
The 411 by Maria:
Before kids, I was a big fan of Stephen King and read everything by him and authors in the same genre. A Stephen King quote on the cover and I was in! Read more
Published 9 months ago by M. G. Gagliano
1.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't get past the objectionable language.
Cannot comment on the story. Had to drop this book early on due to the frequent use of expletives (not deleted). Read more
Published 10 months ago by Faith Adams
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