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Titus Alone
Titus Alone
Jul 6, 2025 11:52 PM

Author:Mervyn Peake,Saul Reichlin

Titus Alone

In this final part of the trilogy, we follow Titus, now almost twenty, as he escapes from the Castle, flees its oppressive Ritual, and becomes lost in a sandstorm. Helped by the owner of a travelling zoo, Muzzlehatch, and his ex-lover Juno, Titus ends up stranded in a big, bustling city. No one there having heard of Gormenghast, the general consensus is that the boy is deranged, and with no papers, he's soon arrested for vagrancy. But there are a few people who believe in his story, or at least who are intrigued by it, and they try to help him. And now Titus, the deserter, the traitor, longs for his home, and looks for it all the time to prove, if only to himself, that Gormenghast is truly real.

The third of the bestselling Gormenghast trilogy. Now available as an audiobook.

Reviews

[The Gormenghast Trilogy] is one of the most important works of the imagination to come out of the age that also produced The Four Quartets, The Unquiet Grave, Brideshead Revisited, The Loved One, Animal Farm and 1984.

—— Anthony Burgess

A master of the macabre and a traveller through the deeper and darker chasms of the imagination

—— The Times

Peake's books are actual additions to life; they give, like certain rare dreams, sensations we never had before

—— C. S. Lewis

With the vogue for Tudor history at its height, this is a brilliant novel that focuses on the volatile relationship with Elizabeth I and the charismatic Lord Dudley.

—— Woman and Home

Based on in-depth knowledge of Elizabeth’s court, and the intrigues that swirled around it, the novel has the benefit of both verisimilitude and captivating story-telling.

—— Choice Magazine

Alison Weir brings all her knowledge of Elizabeth I to vivid life . . . The Marriage Game is a dramatic, complex and deeply poignant tale of intrigue, love and loss. Fantastic.

—— Books Monthly

A highly successful literary thriller with one eye on a shocking chapter in the nation’s genuine history and another on the potential for authorial invention

—— Christian House , Independent on Sunday

Offers a chilling alternative view of the direction the Second World War might have taken had the man who later became the Duke of Windsor…remained on the British throne

—— Mark Nicholls , UK Regional Press

A crafty and pitch-perfect novel of Nazi sympathizers and secret agents in wartime London

—— Independent

It is Taylor’s achievement to have written a tense, page-turning thriller, enriched by acute social observation, within which unfolds a subtle meditation upon where the quest for peace ends and the path to treason begins

—— Graham Stewart , The Times

A highly successful thriller

—— Oldie

The novel is much more than an intriguing exercise in alternative history… This is as skilful and enjoyable a novel as you can ask for, the work of a master-craftsman

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

A fascinating foray into the 'what if?'… Ingenious and extremely plausible

—— Trevor Heaton , UK Regional Press

A gripping and highly convincing novel… Here are intrigue and clever parallel narratives… One emerges from immersion in this tantalizing creation admiring both Taylor’s art and the cleverness of his imagination

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

This is a gripping tale of intrigue

—— Good Book Guide

A splendidly disrespectful counterfactual history that questions the perceived patriotism of King Edward VIII and his notoriously pro-Hitler views

—— Mark Perryman , Huffington Post

A witty, meticulous detailed alternative version of the second world war

—— Observer

While readers will delight in the excitement and adventure of this story, they will also learn about the poverty and difficulties faced by many children throughout the world and about the consequences of corruption in government

—— Marianne Saccardi , Greenwich Citizen

The chase leads them throughout the city, exposing the great disparity between the "haves" and the "have nots," and the huge injustice this represents. They face moral dilemmas throughout and, ultimately, make good decisions. Their intelligence and characters make the condition in which they live seem even more unfair

—— Kristin Anderson , School Library Journal

An exciting read full of suspense. This will appeal to boys and to girls, and could act as a stimulus to classroom discussion of poverty, child workers, recycling in third world countries and the misuse of economic and political power

—— School Librarian
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