The Collaborators by Robert Hichens

(6 User reviews)   1321
Hichens, Robert, 1864-1950 Hichens, Robert, 1864-1950
English
Okay, so picture this: a quiet English village, just after World War I. Everyone's trying to forget the horrors and get back to normal. Then, a famous author, John Milton, shows up to rent a cottage and write his next book. He's charming, he's brilliant, and the whole village is a bit starstruck. But one local man, Stephen Denham, starts to notice something... off. Milton's stories about his war service don't quite add up. His past seems to shift and change. Is he just a private person, or is he hiding something much darker? Denham becomes quietly obsessed, digging into the writer's life while everyone else admires him. This book is less about bombs and battles, and more about the quiet wars we fight with our neighbors and our own memories. It asks a really uncomfortable question: how well can you ever really know someone, especially when they're telling the story? If you like slow-burn tension and characters who aren't quite what they seem, you'll get totally pulled into this one.
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Robert Hichens’s The Collaborators is a post-World War I novel that trades battlefield drama for psychological suspense. It’s set in the seemingly peaceful village of Highgate, where the community is eager to move on from the war’s shadow.

The Story

The plot kicks off when celebrated novelist John Milton arrives to rent a cottage. He’s witty, generous, and quickly becomes the center of village life. But Stephen Denham, a thoughtful and observant local, feels a growing sense of unease. Milton’s anecdotes about his wartime heroics are compelling, yet details seem to contradict themselves. As Denham’s suspicion turns into a quiet investigation, he uncovers gaps and oddities in Milton’s history. The story becomes a cat-and-mouse game, not with chases, but with conversations and carefully placed questions. Denham must weigh his gut feeling against the town’s admiration for Milton, all while wrestling with the possibility that he might be wrong—or that he might be uncovering a terrible truth someone wants to stay buried.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book stick with you is its focus on doubt. Hichens is brilliant at building a low, humming tension. You’re right there with Denham, picking apart a casual remark, wondering if a slipped detail is a clue or just a mistake. Milton is a fantastic character because he’s so likable; you almost want Denham to be mistaken. The book isn’t about spies and secret documents. It’s about the stories we tell to survive, and the people who listen just a little too closely. It feels incredibly relevant—we’ve all met someone whose past seems a bit too polished. The real conflict is internal: it’s Denham’s quiet courage to question the popular narrative, and the personal cost that comes with it.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love character-driven stories where the mystery is in a person, not a crime. If you enjoy authors like Patricia Highsmith, where the suspense comes from psychological unease, you’ll appreciate Hichens’s craft here. It’s also a great pick for anyone interested in the quieter, social aftermath of war—how communities heal, and what they choose to overlook. Don’t go in expecting fast-paced action. Go in ready to lean forward, to listen closely to the dialogue, and to decide for yourself who the real ‘collaborator’ in the title might be. It’s a subtle, smart novel that proves suspicion can be the most disruptive force of all.

Sandra Garcia
7 months ago

Finally found time to read this!

Emily Davis
1 year ago

I was skeptical at first, but the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Worth every second.

Anthony King
11 months ago

I started reading out of curiosity and the arguments are well-supported by credible references. Don't hesitate to start reading.

Sarah Jackson
2 days ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

Elizabeth Clark
1 week ago

Amazing book.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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