Talk:The Girl at Central

Information about this edition
Edition: New York & London; D. Appleton and Co, 1915.
Source: https://archive.org/details/girlatcentralbyg00bonniala & Project Gutenberg
Contributor(s): veni vidi
Level of progress:
Notes: Thanks to Darleen Dove, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
Proofreaders: ditto

Reviews edit

  • The Nation, July 1915: The story is told by a telephone girl in modified telephonese, a jargon which becomes at times a little trying; but the story itself is remarkably good of its kind, and uncommonly well worked out. The mystery is concealed to the very end, unless the reader is a person of exceptional astuteness, for there is just one passage in the early pages of the book that points to the solution, while there are various false clues, cunningly contrived, that will start the earnest seeker running breathlessly in the wrong direction. For the purposes of her story Miss Bonner has omitted to mobilize few of the latest resources of civilization, including an aeroplane, and at the end they are all found to fit into the general scheme with the nicety of a well-contrived puzzle. There is a minx in this book, too, but here it is the minx who gets murdered, and hence the rôle that she plays is more engaging, because more silent, than that of Miss Wells's heroine.