Derelicts by William John Locke

(11 User reviews)   1762
By Victor Mazur Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Room B
Locke, William John, 1863-1930 Locke, William John, 1863-1930
English
Ever feel like life has left you on the sidelines? That’s the core of *Derelicts* by William John Locke, a story about two men who make a bargain in a crisis – and end up changing their lives forever. One’s a former army doctor, haunted by a heartbreaking error. The other’s a restless writer, famous for a novel he didn’t write. They meet on a Cape Town hillside, nursing the same quiet desperation, when a stranger collapses right in front of them. What starts as a simple rescue becomes a chance to shed their old selves. Locke weaves a gripping tale about second chances – without drowning us in drama. You’ll be right there with them, hoping they find what they’re really after.
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The Story

In a Victorian road trip before cars were everywhere, Dr. Robert Luttrell wanders South Africa, a failed medic with a ruined reputation. Then there's Mark Tregurtha, a man in a borrowed body – literally and spiritually, since he’s pretending to be the author of a famous book. Both are running from themselves when they witness a man named Tom Chroille have a heart attack. Instead of just calling for help, they pluck him from the brink and haul him to safety. They get a bigger reward than a thank-you: a shared feeling that purpose isn’t gone for good. Soon they’re staying with a kind English family and Tom’s gutsy daughter, Elaine...

From awkward picnics to simmering confrontations, old debts complicate things. And Elaine becomes more than a caretaker; she sees behind their masks. You’ll wonder 'Are they really capable of starting over – or is this just a nicer way of falling apart?' As one twist unfolds, they must show growth – or disappear again mentally.

Why You Should Read It

Locke writes like someone who knows the taste of failure. The characters here feel unstaged – Dr. Luttrell isn't too proud to cry into his coffee (not like current tidy protagonists a bit too perfect), and the writing has a dry, honest bounce. Instead of zinging dialogue recycled from cheap comedies, you’ll overhear people who slur when frustrated or mumble pride away piece by piece. There's wisdom here: the deepest friendships often scream them joy when danger passes.

The genius? How goodwill crashes against human flaws. I flinched for the third act – still it quietly sat in my brain days later. Your heart will wring reading how inner brokenness cripples those well-positioned to be fine.

If you only want high-speed scenes & cheap wit bail out – but if you appreciate messy, soul-seasoning stories: jump overhead.

Final Verdict

Simply: order it for misty-weekend readers, down-and-almost-out memoirs secret-lovers. This is so deeply 1900s - faint colonial undertone noted - but it’ll take hold if you’ve squared your savings toward fledgling recovery, toward life‘s blacker side blooming muted red. For armchair psychologists and all exhausted custodians of yesterday’s tragedies - this was therapy earlier than therapy named itself.

Devour it after winding your down blankets.



🔓 License Information

This title is part of the public domain archive. Feel free to use it for personal or commercial purposes.

Christopher Davis
1 year ago

The methodology used in this work is academically sound.

Susan Martinez
11 months ago

I particularly value the technical accuracy maintained throughout.

Jennifer Wilson
6 months ago

If you're tired of surface-level information, the argument presented in the middle section is particularly compelling. I'll be citing this in my upcoming project.

Joseph Perez
10 months ago

Looking at the bibliography alone, the attention to detail regarding the core terminology is flawless. This has become my go-to guide for this specific topic.

Barbara Thompson
2 years ago

I appreciate how this edition approaches the core problem, the narrative arc keeps the reader engaged while delivering factual content. It’s a comprehensive resource that doesn't feel bloated.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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