Friends of the Dusk
By (Author) Phil Rickman
Atlantic Books
Corvus
25th May 2016
5th May 2016
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
464
Width 130mm, Height 200mm, Spine 27mm
320g
When autumn storms blast Hereford, centuries-old human bones are found amongst the roots of a tree blown down on the city's Castle Green. But why have they been stolen At the nearby Cathedral, another storm is building around a new, modernising bishop who believes that if the Church is to survive it must phase out irrelevant archaic practices. Not good news for Merrily Watkins, consultant on the paranormal or, as it used to be known, diocesan exorcist. Especially as she's now presented with the job at its most medieval.
In the moody countryside on the edge of Wales, a rambling 12th-century house is thought to be haunted. Although its new owners don't believe in ghosts, they do believe in spiritual darkness and the need for exorcism. But their approach to Merrily is oblique and guarded. No-one can be told - least of all, the new bishop. Merrily's discovery of the house's links with the medieval legend of a man who resisted mortality threatens to expose the hidden history of a more modern cult and its trail of insidious abuse. A trail that may not be closed.
Bedtime reading is sorted - Merrily is back. * Andrew Taylor *
Intelligent rationalists will enjoy the way Rickman engages with the supernatural. * The Times *
No-one in the business deals with the spooky stuff better. * Crime Review UK *
Rickman's series is gaining a mass of fans with each book. This one will keep you entranced until the final page. * Crimesquad *
Phil Rickman lives on the Welsh border where he writes and presents the book programme Phil the Shelf on BBC Radio Wales. He is the acclaimed author of Midwinter of the Spirit (now a major ITV series), the Merrily Watkins series and the John Dee papers. Visit his website at www.philrickman.co.uk.