Derelicts by William John Locke

(11 User reviews)   1763
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.

Kimberly Gonzalez
1 month ago

As someone working in this industry, I found the insights very accurate.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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