TY - BOOK AU - Collins,Wilkie TI - The Guilty River AV - PR PY - 2003/// CY - Salt Lake City, UT PB - Project Gutenberg KW - England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction KW - Interpersonal relations -- Fiction KW - Families -- Fiction N1 - Release date is 2003-01-01; Produced by James Rusk. HTML version by Al Haines; Original publication data not identified N2 - "The Guilty River" by Wilkie Collins is a novel crafted during the late 19th century. Set in a Victorian backdrop, the story follows Gerard Roylake, a young man returning to England after years abroad, who inherits a vast estate and the complexities of a new life intertwined with emotional and social dilemmas, particularly regarding his stepmother and the mysterious lodger of a mill. At the start of the novel, we meet Gerard Roylake who has excused himself from a dinner to indulge in his hobby of catching insects in the woods near his childhood home. Reflecting on his estranged relationship with his father and the curious dynamics of his return, he is struck by a sense of isolation and confusion. This mood thickens when he encounters the river, a symbol of his past, and later meets Cristel Toller, the daughter of the miller. Their interaction is intriguing but marred by the presence of a deaf lodger who harbors jealousy towards Gerard. As Gerard navigates these relationships, questions of social status, personal conflict, and a sense of belonging begin to unfurl, setting the stage for the novel's unfolding mysteries. (This is an automatically generated summary.) UR - https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3634 ER -