The Unseen

by Alan Shelley


Formats

Softcover
£10.99
Hardcover
£20.49
Softcover
£10.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 18/06/2010

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 216
ISBN : 9781449098032
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 216
ISBN : 9781449098049

About the Book

The Unseen is the story of the little man, the insignificant being living in anonymity in the urban landscape but who strikes back and plans and commits the perfect murder. Fate determines that he does not go unpunished for his crime but the police and society are not the avenging authority. This manifests itself as a result of his characteristic of invisibility, as the unseen. His victim is his wife who combines beauty with a pathological hatred of most of mankind, and of her husband in particular. It is for the reader to determine whether his actions are in any way justified.


About the Author

Alan Shelley, born 1931, is the author of three novels, The Colour was Red, I Never Met Ernest Hemingway and Not So Private Lives, and also a textbook on the South African dramatist entitled Athol Fugard. His Plays, People and Politics. He is a Chartered Surveyor and retired in 1993 as the Senior Partner of international property consultants, Knight Frank. He was awarded a PhD in 2006 and lives in Rutland. There are six grandchildren.

 

The Colour was Red is partly autobiographical and concerns the massacre in Amritsar in 1919, the Biafran War – the author spent twenty five years of his working life in Nigeria – and apartheid in South Africa. The second novel is the story of a pastry cook/chef, who served during the First World War and is in Paris at the time of the 1919 Peace Treaty negotiations. The book then recounts his subsequent experiences during the 1926 General Strike, the rise of Fascism in Europe and his success as a writer of detective fiction. During the Second World War he works in the film industry and attempts to write for the stage. Not So Private Lives is a light-hearted account of a production by an amateur dramatic company of Noel Coward's famous play.