For the Love of Guilt
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Dick Donovan
This title uses virtual voice narration
The story begins on a dark, fog-laden November afternoon at Manchester’s London Road Station. It is here that fate intertwines the lives of two men of contrasting character: Josiah Vecquerary, a prosperous and "frank-speaking" Manchester warehouseman, and Richard Hipcraft, a "sparse and shrunken" London solicitor with a voice described as "harsh and unpleasant". Their chance meeting in a first-class carriage, soon joined by the beautiful and mysterious Mrs. Neilsen (later revealed as Sabena Tortolini) and her niece Muriel, sets in motion a "drama of real life" that will lead to scandal, betrayal, and eventually, murder.
Dick Donovan’s narrative explores the rigid social boundaries and the "British reserve" of the era, while simultaneously delving into the darker psychological impulses of his characters. Josiah Vecquerary represents the "better type of the true 'Manchester Man'"—upright and hospitable—yet he finds his stable life unraveling after a series of encounters with Hipcraft and the enigmatic Mrs. Neilsen. The conflict between Vecquerary and Hipcraft, which begins with a petty dispute over a train compartment, escalates into a bitter legal battle and a "strange and startling theory" involving the detective Farabin Tindal.
As the plot shifts from the busy streets of "Cottonopolis" to the grim fog of London and the stark cliffs of Hastings, the novel transforms into a "ravelled skein" of circumstantial evidence. The reappearance of characters like the "sleuth-hound" Slark and the tragic Tortolini highlights Donovan’s mastery of the procedural thriller, long before the genre had acquired its modern form.
This 2026 edition, introduced by Colin Heston, invites a new generation of readers to experience a tale where "true love endureth forever," yet where the shadows of guilt are never far behind. For the Love of Guilt remains a compelling study of human nature, described by Donovan as "a riddle and a mystery," proving that the themes of justice, revenge, and redemption are truly timeless.