Black Sheep: A Novel by Edmund Yates

(8 User reviews)   1393
By Robert Nguyen Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Shelf Three
Yates, Edmund, 1831-1894 Yates, Edmund, 1831-1894
English
Meet George Slyboots—a charming nobody from nowhere who talks his way into London's high society. But when a mysterious black sheep from his past shows up to blackmail him, George has to choose between holding on to his fancy new life or coming clean. He figures a little crime will keep his secret safe. Only one problem: the black sheep won't go quietly. Every lie George tells, every person he double-crosses, drags him deeper into a labyrinth of fraud and fear. By the final chapter, you won't know whom to root for—George, the schemer who kind of had a rough start, or the black sheep, who maybe deserves better than getting stepped on again. It's a Victorian cat-and-mouse game where everyone's hiding something, and the first one to trust a smile might be the last one standing.
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Edmund Yates's Black Sheep is one of those hidden gems that grabs you by the collar on page one and doesn't let go until the last twist. If you like your period dramas with a side of grit and a dash of everyday villainy, you've found your next read.

The Story

George Slyboots starts out as a nobody—a clerk's clerk, really—with no family money and a big mouth stuffed with bad decisions. Then he bluffs his way into London's party scene, talks faster than anybody's poker face, and soon he's got a stupidly rich wife and a mansion. Leo, a black sheep from George's past who knows George's dirty secret. That secret? George might not be the man he pretends to be. Instead of crushing Leo, George tries to buy him off, lie his way out, and dig himself in deeper.

So unfolds a Victorian scammer saga—all champagne, no trust, back rooms full of debt papers, and one pale-faced woman who starts to wonder who she married. Both George and Leo orbit each other like boxers, hitting low below the belt. Each chapter makes you feel dizzier, because loyalty here is rented by the hour.

Why You Should Read It

Forget ladies in corsets crying over lost bonnets. Black Sheep is raw. It looks right at the fake, skimming the shiny surface of better society to see the slush under all that sandpaper social climbing. I mean, George is no good guy—but you'll get him? He was just a hungry boy in a cruel city. And Leo? He's bleak, broke, and brutal if cornered. Nobody wears a set of wings.

It also works as a thriller. The pacing moves dead sprint, dialogue crackles, and all that London mud under the gleam makes it one hundred messier than smuggy Jane Austen type stories. On a lazy Sunday, I want pages that burn. This novel lit up my afternoon couch like a cigarette stub I couldn't put down.

Final Verdict

Perfect for conspiracy history digest readers, long-car-ride audio button punchers, anybody tired of scam-wisdom pop-psych paperbacks who want a tight, damning story of made lives. Also fantastic for modern thriller fans suddenly finding out Victorians knew how to plot. Before Ozark, before Breaking Bad—there was Slyboots. Dark, amused, ruthless truth about a rising nobody who may, quite accidentally, destroy his own disguise.



📚 Public Domain Notice

There are no legal restrictions on this material. It is available for public use and education.

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1 month ago

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6 months ago

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