The Raker by Andrew Sinclair
Requirements: ePUB reader, 217 KB
Overview: Adam Quince's business is death. A writer of obituaries, his own life of tedium is measured out by the index cards of the dead and dying which he monitors in his basement office 'morgue'. But Quince finds his passion for life reignited when he meets the beautiful actress Nada Templeton and becomes engaged in a tug-of-war with her protector, the enigmatic and sinister John Purefoy. Obsessed with death, Purefoy is 'The Raker', named after the men charged cleaning the streets during the Plague of 1665. In the novel's chilling and unforgettable climax, the duel between Quince and the Raker will culminate in a confrontation which only one of them will survive.
Darkly humorous and delightfully macabre, The Raker (1964) is, as Rob Spence writes in his introduction, 'a phantasmagoric, gothic vision of a city of death, inhabited not just by those caught up in the drudgery of modern urban life, but by the ghosts of their predecessors.' This new edition of Andrew Sinclair's engaging and disturbing novel, the first in decades, coincides with the 50th anniversary of its original publication.
Genre: Fiction > General

Download Instructions:
1.http://www108.zippyshare.com/v/3WF7uWAd/file.html
2.http://www.mirrorcreator.com/files/RSU26EVF/
Requirements: ePUB reader, 217 KB
Overview: Adam Quince's business is death. A writer of obituaries, his own life of tedium is measured out by the index cards of the dead and dying which he monitors in his basement office 'morgue'. But Quince finds his passion for life reignited when he meets the beautiful actress Nada Templeton and becomes engaged in a tug-of-war with her protector, the enigmatic and sinister John Purefoy. Obsessed with death, Purefoy is 'The Raker', named after the men charged cleaning the streets during the Plague of 1665. In the novel's chilling and unforgettable climax, the duel between Quince and the Raker will culminate in a confrontation which only one of them will survive.
Darkly humorous and delightfully macabre, The Raker (1964) is, as Rob Spence writes in his introduction, 'a phantasmagoric, gothic vision of a city of death, inhabited not just by those caught up in the drudgery of modern urban life, but by the ghosts of their predecessors.' This new edition of Andrew Sinclair's engaging and disturbing novel, the first in decades, coincides with the 50th anniversary of its original publication.
Genre: Fiction > General
Download Instructions:
1.http://www108.zippyshare.com/v/3WF7uWAd/file.html
2.http://www.mirrorcreator.com/files/RSU26EVF/
"This year will be harder than last year. On the other hand, it will be easier than next year.” - Enver Hoxha