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Marley by Jon Clinch
Marley by Jon Clinch





If A Christmas Carol tugs at the heartstrings, Clinch’s novel deepens the story to eviscerate the whole heart. The bait-and-switch ending-in which the author must sync his story with the one with which we are familiar-is the only flaw in an otherwise canny book.

Marley by Jon Clinch

Clinch terrifies his readers by flinging Dickens’s beloved characters into Marley’s fires, winding the plot strings so tight it’s almost unbearable. In this version of the story, Marley is the nastier piece of work, breaking Fan’s heart and so defrauding Scrooge as to make him believe he must abandon Belle. Loved by Belle, Scrooge softens, but Marley goes deeper into nefarious dirty dealing. They court the worthy young women readers know: Scrooge’s sister Fan, and the beautiful Belle, threatened with destitution. Clinch has done something remarkable in Marley, not merely offering a parergon to Dickens’s little masterpiece. In London, the two ambitious young entrepreneurs join forces, but Marley is ever the swindler, concealing profits and their continued involvement in the slave trade as Scrooge beavers away at their accounts.

Marley by Jon Clinch Marley by Jon Clinch

As soon as Marley encounters Scrooge during dank boarding school days, he embarks upon his life of financial shenanigans, beginning with misappropriating Scrooge’s meager allowance. Clinchs gripping tale spins a dark backstory for two of Dickenss most notorious characters. Clinch’s gripping tale spins a dark backstory for two of Dickens’s most notorious characters, Jacob Marley and Ebenezer Scrooge.







Marley by Jon Clinch