No. 13 Toroni : A mystery by Julius Regis

(6 User reviews)   1466
By Richard Baker Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Rare Room
English
Hey, have you heard about *No. 13 Toroni*? It's this super obscure mystery by someone calling themselves Julius Regis, and I just have to talk about it. Imagine a foggy seaside town, a random mansion with the blink of its only window, and a tangled web of secrets, murder, and odd happenings. The main twist? The whole story revolves around an aspiring writer named Julius who gets swept up in a nine-year-old crime that someone wants buried or rediscovered. It's like a Hitchcock film but in book form. If you're into puzzling cold cases with lonely landmarks and unreliable narrators, this one's got the chills to spare. You trust me, give it a peek!
Share

No. 13 Toroni by Julius Regis is one of those hidden gems I dug up while browsing a rundown bookshop. The cover promised an autumn fog and detective mysteries, and the story delivered—with sharp twists and surprises.

The Story

We follow a man named Julius, though the narrator might just as easily be him—it's hazy from page one. Julius stumbles into a cold case while visiting the barren cliffs of a coastal town all made mysterious by local superstitions about a mansion number “No. 13 Toroni” on a tacky street no one else talks about. An attic widow, a cursed ring, and a writer struck dumb with writer’s block are all part of the tango. A police inspector (the dead kind), a deceptive friend, and childhood memorabilia make for an uncomfortable read—and I love it. The narrator’s version can change every chapter, and all details left to the reader to glue together.

Why You Should Read It

On the outside, *No.13 Toroni* is an easy breezy mystery for sleepy evenings. But inside, it’s sharp metafiction: Julius Regis references the real Regis style of teasing fraud from truth. That rabbit hole feeling? Yeah, this book has it personally. I caught myself falling for red herrings one minute and losing trust in the very furniture of the story the next. The writing keeps you engaged—short, tired but potent, like echoes inside the sea mist around cliff slopes. And unlike those high-flown literary shows, this book has heart and serious questions about feeling your own shadow is following you. It has got comfort reads with claws—magnific and quietly ripping.

Final Verdict

So who‘s it for? Think of book-lovers that enjoy moody classic film yet appreciate book irony or inside jokes?—Right down your beach. But specifically, you're pleased by Christopher Fowler's dread, Alfred Hitchcock endings, or a narrator whose lies get sweeter together? Pick this up! Trust hees may not needed—the best parts come when you wonder on your own. Honestly, recommendations like stars—all to different parts—three would get cold at shore.”



🔓 Legal Disclaimer

This title is part of the public domain archive. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.

Donald Johnson
3 days ago

I've been looking for a reliable source on this topic, and the objective evaluation of the pros and cons is very refreshing. This exceeded my expectations in almost every way.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

Add a Review

Your Rating *

Related eBooks