The Hundred and Ninety-Nine Steps

Michel Faber
3.34
1,383 ratings 153 reviews
Sian, tired of nightmares in which she meets a grisly end, decides she needs to get out more, so she joins an archaeological dig at Whitby Abbey. What she finds is a mystery involving a long-hidden murder, a man with big hands, a fragile manuscript in a bottle, and a rather attractive dog called Hadrian. Faber's dazzling novella takes us up the 199 steps in Whitby that link the 21st century with the ruins of the past. Equal and indissoluble parts thriller, romance, historical/ghost story and meditation on the nature of sincerity, this is an ingenious literary page-turner. Atmospheric photographs complement the text beautifully. This book, like Henry James's The Turn of the Screw, deploys a masterful sense of ambiguity, outstanding narrative power, works on many levels and, as always with Faber's writing, is elegant, thought-provoking, distinctive and compelling.
Genres: FictionMysteryShort StoriesContemporaryBritish LiteratureGothicNovellaNovelsLiteratureHorror
116 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
158 (11%)
4 star
426 (31%)
3 star
566 (41%)
2 star
193 (14%)
1 star
40 (3%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Michel Faber

Lists with this book

Fallen
A Thousand Splendid Suns
Pure
Beautiful Book Covers
517 books347 voters
One Day at a Time 2017: A husband & Wife’s 87 Day Road Trip through 22 States on 2 Harley Softails
Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits
The Commoner
Where we've Traveled
122 books13 voters
Jane Eyre
Wuthering Heights
The Secret Garden
Yorkshire (fiction and nonfiction)
203 books91 voters
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Books so good you read them twice!
198 books30 voters