Armadale

[Armadale]
Year: 
1866
Type: 
Public: 
Publisher: 
Penguin Classics
Year of publication: 
1995
Pages: 
752
Moral assessment: 
Type: Literature
Nothing inappropriate.
Some morally inappropriate content.
Contains significant sections contrary to faith or morals.
Contains some lurid passages, or presents a general ideological framework that could confuse those without much Christian formation.
Contains several lurid passages, or presents an ideological framework that is contrary or foreign to Christian values.
Explicitly contradicts Catholic faith or morals, or is directed against the Church and its institutions.
Literary quality: 
Recommendable: 
Transmits values: 
Sexual content: 
Violent content: 
Vulgar or obscene language: 
Ideas that contradict Church teaching: 
The rating of the different categories comes from the opinion of Delibris' collaborators

The old Allan Armadale confesses in writing, on his deathbed, a horrible secret that only his son should know when he comes of age. Twenty years later, this mixed-race son goes by the name Ozias Midwinter. The revelation of the secret causes enormous suffering, complicated by the involvement of a beautiful redhead with a dark past, Miss Lydia Gwilt, rebellious to any submission. This character is undoubtedly one of Wilkie Collins's greatest creations and the driving force behind a diabolical plot of greed, harassment, impersonation, and murder.

From the spa town of Wildbad to the rugged Isle of Man, from Madeira to the labyrinthine London, from the lakes of Norfolk to sunny Naples, Armadale moves from the dreamlike to the real, from the pathetic to the comic, barely giving the reader a moment’s respite.

Published in serial form between 1864 and 1866, it is the third of his major novels. Part of the narration consists of letters between various characters or excerpts from Lydia Gwilt's diary.

Author: Manuel Martínez, Spain
Update on: May 2025