Penelope Evans

  Author

 

SNAP SHOTS  - A BLOG

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

   

Bookbag recommended buy

Read first review

 
5.0 out of 5 stars A ghost story for the capucino generation, 10 Aug 2009
Is Sara mad or haunted? Mad or haunted? The question keeps recurring and won't be laid to rest. There are real unexplained phenomena that others experience but this is the ordinary world of London's chattering classes and solid rural folk. Why does the ground resist Tom's powerful machines? Is he just an inept yuppie pursuing a false rural idyll or is there a supernatural force against him? Sara subconsciously yearns for a child but her conscious self is in a comfortable pact with Tom, enjoy life, no children. The reader senses the tension in her psyche creates a distorting prism before Sara's eyes, but this is the reader's only view of a world, at once strange and commonplace. After many twists and false leads we reach a final conclusion, which somehow seemed inevitable in retrospect. This is a book I feel Stephen King would have been proud to have written, if he ever read it, and if he hadn't written quite a lot of good books already, well you know what I mean.
5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful story, 6 Aug 2009
I have just finished reading this and am almost sorry I have finished, as I enjoyed it so much. What a page turner, I could hardly put this book down at times. I have read all Penelope Evans books since she wrote "The Last Girl" in 1995 and she just gets better and better.

 

 

".......... page-turning compulsion and never flags till the last word has been read."              

Ruth Rendell 

NovelsBiographyLinksWork in progressBuy

Click here to meet the author

Readers Reviews

 

 

 

 

e mail contact@penelopeevans.co.uk