The House on the Strand
Compelling
Creative
Suspenseful

The House on the Strand

The classic time travel novel from the legendary writer behind Rebecca and "The Birds." "The House on the Strand is prime du Maurier." --New York Times Dick Young is lent a house in Cornwall by his friend Professor Magnus Lane. During his stay he agrees to serve as a guinea pig for a new drug that Magnus has discovered in his scientific research. When Dick samples Magnus's potion, he finds himself doing the impossible: traveling through time while staying in place, thrown all the way back into Medieval Cornwall. The concoction wear off after several hours, but its effects are intoxicating and Dick cannot resist his newfound powers. As his journeys increase, Dick begins to resent the days he must spend in the modern world, longing ever more fervently to get back into his world of centuries before, and the home of the beautiful Lady Isolda...
Sign up to use

Reviews

Photo of Sarah Sammis
Sarah Sammis@pussreboots
3 stars
Apr 4, 2024

Daphne du Maurier wrote great beginnings and great endings but sometimes she got lost in the middle as she did with The House on the Strand. This novel comes late in her writing career in 1969, just before her collection of short stories, Don't Look Now. Coming on the heels of A Traveller in Time I couldn't help but see similarities between the two books. Here, though, the reason is science, not magic. Biophysicist Magnus Lane has created a serum that when ingested allows one to experience the past. He convinces the narrator, Dick Young, to be his guinea pig although he does partake of the serum too from time to time. At at time when LSD was part of the pop culture scene, it's easy to draw connections between the drug and the time travel formula that Dick and Magnus take. Just as LSD can cause flashbacks, Dick ultimately learns the true negative effects of the serum, first in the tragic death of his mentor and then in his own physical condition. Frankly though, I found Dick's trips back to the 14th century rather dull. What kept me reading was not the fates of Roger and Isolda but the tension between Dick's attraction to Magnus and his duties to his American wife and her children from a previous marriage. Like in My Cousin Rachel (1951) there is a strong homosexual subtext that is ever present but rarely acknowledged, certainly not the with frankness of the stories in Don't Look Now.

Photo of Jamieson
Jamieson@jamiesonk
3 stars
Jan 23, 2023

3.5* another daphne du maurier cliffhanger ending slay

Photo of Cerys
Cerys@burntoutbookworm
5 stars
Dec 20, 2021

A really interesting novel. This concept is not something I have ever read before and it was amazing. Du Maurier's writing is exceptional and super easy to fly through. I am so glad this is the first novel of hers that I have read. Would definitely recommend.

Photo of Cerys
Cerys@burntoutbookworm
5 stars
Dec 19, 2021

A really interesting novel. This concept is not something I have ever read before and it was amazing. Du Maurier's writing is exceptional and super easy to fly through. I am so glad this is the first novel of hers that I have read. Would definitely recommend.

Photo of Jemima Scott
Jemima Scott@readwithmims
3 stars
May 17, 2023
Photo of Alice Foster
Alice Foster@alice_foster
4 stars
Dec 29, 2021
+3
Photo of Pierke Bosschieter
Pierke Bosschieter@pierke
5 stars
Aug 21, 2023
Photo of Jane McCullough
Jane McCullough@janemccullough
3 stars
Feb 8, 2022
Photo of Sofia Collodel
Sofia Collodel@sophiie91
4 stars
Jan 10, 2022
Photo of Allison Francis
Allison Francis@library_of_ally
4 stars
Jan 9, 2022
Photo of Moray Lyle McIntosh
Moray Lyle McIntosh@bookish_arcadia
3 stars
Dec 5, 2021
Photo of Jade Flynn
Jade Flynn@jadeflynn
3 stars
Nov 20, 2021
Photo of Rachel Prudden
Rachel Prudden@stubborncurias
3 stars
Sep 14, 2021
Photo of Christina Hufford
Christina Hufford@chuffwrites
4 stars
Sep 2, 2021