
Summary
In this eerie, atmospheric and mysterious tale, a woman returns to the house in Morecambe Bay where she grew up in the 1960s to find it falling apart, undermined by the roots of two huge sycamores. She is unaware that she has awoken the spirits of her parents, Jack and Nettie Clifford, who watch anxiously as their daughter Annette is overwhelmed by the state of the house and realise too late how far they neglected her as a child.
As their memories come alive, the story unfolds of a cr…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781473630628 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1473630622 |
| Author: | Jenn Ashworth |
| Publisher: | Hodder & Stoughton |
| Imprint: | Sceptre |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 304 |
| Release Date: | 28 March 2017 |
| Weight: | 240g |
| Dimensions: | 196mm x 128mm x 24mm |
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Critics Review
A fantastically dark and unsettling story of healing and hope
A disturbing, precisely rendered tale of charisma, misplaced faith and transgenerational trauma, with a touch of the supernatural … [it] brings to mind the claustrophobic, suburban world of Dennis Potter’s great play Brimstone and Treacle. – Alex Clark * Spectator *Headily atmospheric and luminously written. Ashworth’s narrative is packed with the pungent smells of the sea and decay … her pages are threaded with original, arresting images … not many writers could bind the supernatural and the literary with such lightness of touch – Francesca Angelini * Sunday Times *Ashworth’s gift for capturing the quirky ordinariness of life is as sharp here as it is in her previous novels … Dark, compelling, beautifully written, Fell adds another powerful story to the mythology of our strange hinterlands. – Andrew Michael Hurley * Guardian *A beautifully written book which cleverly blurs fantasy and realism. – David Mitchell * Daily Mail *Despite the ethereal narrators, the book’s triumph is in the corporeal, the ache of the mundane, the beauty of small things. The characters have a poetry of the ordinary - a brokenness reminiscent of Alan Bennett that makes them flesh and blood. – Ruth McKee * Irish Times *There’s magic in this Lancashire-set novel … Atmospheric [and] empathic – Stephanie Cross * Lady *
This marvellous novel is both haunted and haunting, as Ashworth expertly blurs the boundaries between the past and the present, the homely and the uncanny, the quick and the dead. Touching on profound questions of myth, mortality and redemption, it is both sinister and beautiful - and ultimately tender.
* Sarah Perry, author of The Essex Serpent *Eerie and lyrical - prepare to be haunted by this innovative novel. * Carys Bray, author of Sweet Home and A Song For Issy Bradley *About The Author
Jenn Ashworth
Jenn Ashworth was born in 1982 in Preston. She studied English at Cambridge and since then has gained an MA from Manchester University, trained as a librarian and run a prison library in Lancashire. She now lectures in Creative Writing at the University of Lancaster. Her first novel, A Kind of Intimacy, was published in 2009 and won a Betty Trask Award. In 2011 her second, Cold Light, was published by Sceptre and she was chosen by BBC’s The Culture Show as one of the twelve Best New British Novelists. In 2013 her third novel, The Friday Gospels, was published to resounding critical acclaim. She lives in Lancaster with her husband, son and daughter.
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