With My Little Eye
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Edition: 1st us ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Chipped and worn with some minor damage
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Boards - rubbed edges. Binding - cracked.
A quietly suspenseful British crime novel, With My Little Eye chronicles the unsettling experiences of a young man who becomes an inadvertent witness to a murder and finds himself drawn into a web of danger he is ill-equipped to escape. Roy Fuller constructs the narrative with a restrained, psychological tension that distinguishes it from more sensational crime fiction of its era, grounding the story in the mundane details of everyday life to make the threat feel all the more real. The protagonist's growing paranoia and moral uncertainty are rendered with sharp, understated prose, illustrating Fuller's gift for character study as much as plot. Written by a poet of considerable reputation, the novel carries a literary precision that elevates it within the mid-twentieth-century British thriller tradition, making it a rewarding read for fans of intelligent, atmospheric crime fiction.
Author: Roy Fuller
Format: Hardback
Published: 1957, The Macmillan Company, New York
Genre: Crime fiction
Edition: 1st us ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Chipped and worn with some minor damage
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Boards - rubbed edges. Binding - cracked.
A quietly suspenseful British crime novel, With My Little Eye chronicles the unsettling experiences of a young man who becomes an inadvertent witness to a murder and finds himself drawn into a web of danger he is ill-equipped to escape. Roy Fuller constructs the narrative with a restrained, psychological tension that distinguishes it from more sensational crime fiction of its era, grounding the story in the mundane details of everyday life to make the threat feel all the more real. The protagonist's growing paranoia and moral uncertainty are rendered with sharp, understated prose, illustrating Fuller's gift for character study as much as plot. Written by a poet of considerable reputation, the novel carries a literary precision that elevates it within the mid-twentieth-century British thriller tradition, making it a rewarding read for fans of intelligent, atmospheric crime fiction.