The Phantom Lover
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Product details
- ISBN 9789357316750
- Dimensions: 183 x 121mm
- Publication Date: 20 Jun 2025
- Publisher: Hachette Book Publishing India Pvt Ltd
- Publication City/Country: IN
- Product Form: Paperback
Set in the enchanting backdrop of a Victorian-era English countryside, the story takes readers on a captivating journey illed with heartache, longing, and forbidden romance.
Victoria, a young woman trapped in a loveless marriage to a wealthy and controlling man, yearns for true happiness, and finds solace in the arms of a stranger who mysteriously appears in her dreams. This enigmatic figure, known only as the Phantom Lover, becomes a symbol of freedom and passion, awakening her desires and challenging societal norms.
Ayres intricately weaves together the themes of love and the supernatural, effortlessly drawing the reader deeper into the story. The ethereal quality of the Phantom Lover is mesmerizing, and readers will find themselves eagerly turning the pages to learn more about his true nature and the secrets he holds.
At once absorbing and atmospheric the plot unfolds at a suspenseful pace, keeping readers hooked until the very end.
Ruby Mildred Ayres was born on 28 January 1881, in Watford,
Hertfordshire, the third daughter of the marriage formed by Alice (née
Whitford) and Charles Pryor Ayres, a London-based architect. In 1909,
she married Reginald William Pocock, a insurance broker, and they
lived in Harrow until his death in a train accident. As widow without
children, she moved to her sister’s home at Weybridge, Surrey.
She started to write as a girl, and her first story was published in a
magazine shortly after her marriage, and in 1912, she published her first
novel, Castles in Spain. In September 1915, with her first popular success,
Richard Chatterton, V.C. (which sold over 50,000 copies in the first
three years), she moved publishing houses to Hodder and Stoughton,
where she remained until her death in 1955. She wrote over 150 novels
and serialized works. Several of her works became films and she did
screenwriting for Society for Sale among others. She corresponded
with Douglas Sladen, and also was possibly an inspiration for the
P. G. Wodehouse character Rosie M. Banks. She died on 14 November
1955 in a nursing home in Weybridge, aged 74, of a combination of
pneumonia and a cerebral thrombosis. She was cremated four days later
at Golders Green in north London.
