The Trail of the Serpent - M. E. Braddon

(8 User reviews)   2057
By Donald Scott Posted on Feb 11, 2026
In Category - Satire
M. E. Braddon M. E. Braddon
English
Picture this: a man is found dead in a ditch, and everyone assumes it's a simple accident. Everyone except the victim's brother, who can't shake the feeling something's wrong. That's where 'The Trail of the Serpent' starts, and it only gets twistier from there. This isn't your typical Victorian mystery. M. E. Braddon, who was famous for scandalous 'sensation' novels, gives us a detective story way ahead of its time. We follow Mr. Peters, a detective who uses logic and deduction in a world that usually relies on hunches and luck. It's got secret identities, stolen inheritances, and a villain who's chillingly clever. If you like stories where you're never quite sure who to trust, and where the 'good guy' has to be just as smart as the bad one, you'll get hooked. It's a proper page-turner that shows the dark side of respectability.
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Let's talk about 'The Trail of the Serpent.' First published in 1860, it feels surprisingly modern. Braddon drops us into a world of secrets hiding behind polite society.

The Story

A man named Raymond Marwood is found dead. The official ruling is accidental drowning, but his half-brother, Richard, suspects foul play. He's right. The real killer is their other brother, the outwardly respectable but secretly broke and desperate Jabez. To cover his tracks, Jabez frames an innocent man for the crime. Enter Mr. Peters, a detective from London's famous Scotland Yard. Peters is a quiet, observant man who believes in facts over fancy. He digs into the case, following a cold trail that leads through lies, blackmail, and a tangled web of family greed. The story isn't just about catching a killer; it's a race to save the framed man from the gallows and untangle a plot involving a huge fortune.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how fresh it feels. Forget the bumbling constables of older stories—Mr. Peters is a professional. He uses forensic details, interviews witnesses, and thinks several steps ahead. He's a blueprint for detectives like Sherlock Holmes who came later. The villain, Jabez, is equally fascinating. He's not a cartoonish monster, but a calculating man driven by desperation and a sense of entitlement. Braddon makes you understand his motives even as you root for his downfall. The book also has a great energy. It moves between London's gritty streets and the uneasy calm of the countryside, showing that crime isn't confined to dark alleys—it lives in drawing rooms, too.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for mystery lovers who enjoy a classic feel but want a plot that moves. If you like authors like Wilkie Collins or are curious about where the detective novel really began, you'll find a lot to love here. It's also a great pick for historical fiction readers who want a story that's less about corsets and carriages and more about suspense and psychological drama. 'The Trail of the Serpent' is a clever, gripping read that proves a good mystery is timeless.



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Jackson Allen
9 months ago

Text is crisp, making it easy to focus.

Christopher Lee
3 months ago

To be perfectly clear, the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly. I learned so much from this.

Andrew Allen
3 months ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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