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Bad Juliet
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At a tuberculosis sanitarium in the Adirondacks, a young tutor falls in love with a mysterious woman who survived the Lusitania disaster.“Bad Juliet will hold you in its grip from its opening pages...
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02 September 2025

At a tuberculosis sanitarium in the Adirondacks, a young tutor falls in love with a mysterious woman who survived the Lusitania disaster.
“Bad Juliet will hold you in its grip from its opening pages, combining the pacing and twists of a thriller with the compelling characterizations and masterful prose of a writer at the top of his form.” — Nino Ricci, award-winning author of The Origin of Species
Recently jilted by his fiancé, Paul Gascoyne takes a job as a tutor to the patients at the Trudeau Sanitarium in upstate New York. There, in the icebound beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, he finds himself drawn to Sarah Ballard, a beautiful but enigmatic young woman, traumatized by her past aboard the ill-fated ship Lusitania. To rouse her out of her gloom, Paul encourages her to write a memoir.
As Paul reads her words, it gradually becomes clear that Sarah’s memories are a tangle of truth and fiction that he can’t begin to unravel. And yet he cannot overcome his attraction to her. When a terrible relapse leaves Sarah worried that she has little time left, she begs Paul to be the one person in the world who will truly know her.
“Bad Juliet will hold you in its grip from its opening pages, combining the pacing and twists of a thriller with the compelling characterizations and masterful prose of a writer at the top of his form.” — Nino Ricci, award-winning author of The Origin of Species
Recently jilted by his fiancé, Paul Gascoyne takes a job as a tutor to the patients at the Trudeau Sanitarium in upstate New York. There, in the icebound beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, he finds himself drawn to Sarah Ballard, a beautiful but enigmatic young woman, traumatized by her past aboard the ill-fated ship Lusitania. To rouse her out of her gloom, Paul encourages her to write a memoir.
As Paul reads her words, it gradually becomes clear that Sarah’s memories are a tangle of truth and fiction that he can’t begin to unravel. And yet he cannot overcome his attraction to her. When a terrible relapse leaves Sarah worried that she has little time left, she begs Paul to be the one person in the world who will truly know her.
Price: $19.99
Pages: 352
Publisher: Dundurn Press
Imprint: Dundurn Press
Publication Date:
02 September 2025
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781459755727
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
FICTION / Historical / 20th Century / General, Fiction: general and literary, FICTION / Literary, FICTION / Psychological, FICTION / Medical, Historical fiction
Captivating and beautifully written, with extraordinary care to reimagine daily life in a sanitarium, this is an intriguing tale with the taut pace of a thriller.
A doom-haunted story of obsessive love. If it sometimes takes on the aura of a fevered dream — well, this is the sort of period setting that invites it and compels one to read on.
[Bad Juliet is] a tragedy full of surprises — and truly moving.
Bad Juliet is just too immersive, too classical, too beautifully told, too interesting a read to be merely classed a beach read. It’s a gracious “Lake House Read.” Something to really savour when you have time and the need to dissolve completely into another world.
There’s a Nick Carraway feel to the narration, and the thrust of the narrative is well-paced and engaging. Much like the ending in The Great Gatsby, one is left wondering about the illusive nature of fulfillment and genuine happiness for Blunt’s characters.
Giles Blunt deftly captures the mystique of a tuberculosis ‘healing’ town, and all the unavoidable drama that occurs when obsessive love sets itself inside a patient's mind and body.
Bad Juliet will hold you in its grip from its opening pages, combining the pacing and twists of a thriller with the compelling characterizations and masterful prose of a writer at the top of his form. Giles Blunt captures the world of an early twentieth-century sanitarium with the vividness and nuance of Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain, all the while confronting us with issues just as pressing today as they were a hundred years ago.
Bad Juliet peels back the placid surface of a sanitarium town in early twentieth-century upstate New York to reveal tragedy, lies, and passionate love among characters who are much more complicated than they seem at first glance. With the enigmatic woman at its centre and its many unexpected turns, this is Giles Blunt at his narrative best.
A powerful, engrossing, and beautifully written tale of a struggling poet, a famous Broadway playwright, and the beautiful young woman — a survivor of the Lusitania suffering from tuberculosis — whom both men love. Set in a sanitarium among the awe-inspiring lakes and forests of upstate New York, Bad Juliet shadows the trio as the men vie for the affections of a woman whose dark past and horrifying secrets threaten them all. Bad Juliet is a romance, a period piece, and a mystery, not to mention a North American answer to Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain.
In this charming novel, Giles Blunt uses the magic of his narrative talents to tantalize us about the true character of his appealing heroine, accused of lies, fraud, and loose morals. Best read by lamplight and a blazing fire.
Nothing prepares you for this glorious read. A gripping narrative, an unlikely setting and plot twists leaping out like unexpected moguls on a ski slope which the masterful prose of the author skims over with panache…. A novel of great worth, brilliance and originality.
Novelists who deliver a profound sense of place in their writings are worth their weight in gold. Take Giles Blunt, for example.
A doom-haunted story of obsessive love. If it sometimes takes on the aura of a fevered dream — well, this is the sort of period setting that invites it and compels one to read on.
[Bad Juliet is] a tragedy full of surprises — and truly moving.
Bad Juliet is just too immersive, too classical, too beautifully told, too interesting a read to be merely classed a beach read. It’s a gracious “Lake House Read.” Something to really savour when you have time and the need to dissolve completely into another world.
There’s a Nick Carraway feel to the narration, and the thrust of the narrative is well-paced and engaging. Much like the ending in The Great Gatsby, one is left wondering about the illusive nature of fulfillment and genuine happiness for Blunt’s characters.
Giles Blunt deftly captures the mystique of a tuberculosis ‘healing’ town, and all the unavoidable drama that occurs when obsessive love sets itself inside a patient's mind and body.
Bad Juliet will hold you in its grip from its opening pages, combining the pacing and twists of a thriller with the compelling characterizations and masterful prose of a writer at the top of his form. Giles Blunt captures the world of an early twentieth-century sanitarium with the vividness and nuance of Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain, all the while confronting us with issues just as pressing today as they were a hundred years ago.
Bad Juliet peels back the placid surface of a sanitarium town in early twentieth-century upstate New York to reveal tragedy, lies, and passionate love among characters who are much more complicated than they seem at first glance. With the enigmatic woman at its centre and its many unexpected turns, this is Giles Blunt at his narrative best.
A powerful, engrossing, and beautifully written tale of a struggling poet, a famous Broadway playwright, and the beautiful young woman — a survivor of the Lusitania suffering from tuberculosis — whom both men love. Set in a sanitarium among the awe-inspiring lakes and forests of upstate New York, Bad Juliet shadows the trio as the men vie for the affections of a woman whose dark past and horrifying secrets threaten them all. Bad Juliet is a romance, a period piece, and a mystery, not to mention a North American answer to Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain.
In this charming novel, Giles Blunt uses the magic of his narrative talents to tantalize us about the true character of his appealing heroine, accused of lies, fraud, and loose morals. Best read by lamplight and a blazing fire.
Nothing prepares you for this glorious read. A gripping narrative, an unlikely setting and plot twists leaping out like unexpected moguls on a ski slope which the masterful prose of the author skims over with panache…. A novel of great worth, brilliance and originality.
Novelists who deliver a profound sense of place in their writings are worth their weight in gold. Take Giles Blunt, for example.
Giles Blunt grew up in North Bay, Ontario, before studying English Literature at the University of Toronto. The author of twelve novels, including the award-winning John Cardinal Mystery series, Blunt has more recently turned to literary fiction with Bad Juliet. He lives in Toronto.