About the Book
“Something has been let loose…”
In Edwardian Suffolk , a manor house stands alone in a lost corner of the Fens: a glinting wilderness of water whose whispering reeds guard ancient secrets. Maud is a lonely child growing up without a mother, ruled by her repressive father.
When he finds a painted medieval devil in a graveyard, unhallowed forces are awakened.
Maud’s battle has begun. She must survive a world haunted by witchcraft , the age-old legends of her beloved fen – and the even more nightmarish demons of her father’s past.
Format: ebook (359 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 4th April 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery
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My Review
Wakenhyrst is described by the publishers as ‘a darkly Gothic thriller’ and there are definitely Gothic elements although I had to keep reminding myself the book is supposed to be set in 1911. The style in which Edmund’s journals are written, his misogynistic views and even the domestic routine of Wake’s End seemed to me to evoke the 19th century rather than the years running up to the First World War. Similarly, the odious Dr Grayson’s outdated medical notions didn’t seem to belong in the 20th century.
The main part of the book consists of chapters from Maud’s point of view, interspersed with entries from her father’s journal and, later, excerpts from the writings of a medieval mystic, Alice Pyett (who is based on the English Christian mystic, Margery Kempe).
Edmund comes across as a monster, a man unable to control his sexual appetites and who is exacting to the point of obsession about how the household at Wake’s End should be run. His treatment of Maud’s mother amounts to what we would today recognise as coercive control, seeking to manage every aspect of her life: what she wears, what she eats, even how she identifies herself. He is also disdainful of his daughter Maud, a fact she only discovers much later. Given her father’s belief there is no benefit in educating a woman, Maud is forced to make surreptitious visits to his library to satisfy her quest for knowledge. Despite everything, she matures into an intelligent and independent-minded young woman, readily embracing the theories of Charles Darwin and becoming increasingly disenchanted with religion.
The author creates an eerie and unsettling atmosphere using the vast, lonely fen that surrounds Wake’s End particularly well. It becomes one of the manifestations of Edmund’s increasing madness. ‘I kept catching whiffs of the fen itself: a swampy rottenness that seemed to come and go, making it doublt distracting.’ We witness Edmund’s increasingly paranoid imaginings, namely that a devil, like that depicted in the so-called Doom painting uncovered in the local church (think Hieronymus Bosch’s ‘The Last Judgment’), has been set loose. ‘I could feel the demon’s presence in the grounds: watching, waiting. It wants to stop me. It shall fail.’ He becomes convinced the fen is home to this demon leading him to research arcane rituals associated with exorcism, some of which are extremely gruesome.
Those familiar with the ghost stories of M.R. James will feel at home with scenes describing some of the events that so disturb Edmund, such as the grotesque carvings in the church (‘The Stalls of Barchester Cathedral’) or his conviction that something is hidden in the ivy that cloaks the walls of Wake’s End (‘The Ash Tree’). ‘This morning when I sat down in my study with a book, I was disturbed by a furtive scrabbling at the windowpane. It wasn’t the tapping of a bird; this sounded more like claws. On raising the sash, I thought I glimpsed something scuttling off into the ivy.’
The reader witnesses Edmund’s deteriorating mental state which manifests itself in a kind of religious mania. He increasingly sees parallels between his experiences and those of Alice Pyett and, later the life of St Guthlaf, to whom the local church is dedicated. He also has strange dreams and hallucinations. But are the displaced objects, the strange sounds or the obnoxious miasma evidence of the presence of supernatural beings or the work of human hands?
Having become her father’s secretary after her mother’s death – a death she holds her father reponsible for – Maud gains access to his journal, secretly reading his daily musings and, as a result, learning some shocking truths about his sister’s death and his increasingly deranged thoughts. She becomes fearful of what her father might be capable of and afraid for those around her, especially a young man employed in the household to whom she has become close.
Of course, the reader already knows what Edmund is capable of from the book’s prologue which describes the climactic event of the book, even if it does cast doubt on Maud’s role in it. Only a few previously undisclosed details are saved for the end of the book, as Maud finally agrees to publication of the full story in order to counter the ‘lies’ contained in the newspaper article published in 1966 that opens the book, but also for the more practical reason that she needs to fund repairs to Wake’s End. For me, the framing device reduced the feeling of suspense that I hoped the book would deliver. I already knew what was going to happen and that it was the product of madness; the next 300 pages were just about telling me why. However, I know I’m in a minority here and many other readers have loved it.
I received a review copy via NetGalley.
In three words: Atmospheric, eerie, dark
Try something similar: The Bone Flower by Charles Lambert
About the Author
Michelle Paver was born in central Africa but came to England as a child. After gaining a degree in Biochemistry at Oxford University, she was a partner at a City law firm, until she gave that up to write full time. She is the author of the bestselling, award-winning series that began with Wolf Brother. The series has sold over 3 million copies in 36 territories, with acclaimed audio editions read by Ian McKellen. Wolfbane is the final book in the series. Like the others it can be read as a standalone story. (Photo: Twitter profile)
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Hmm. Not for me I think. I’m not a fan of the Gothic novel in the first place, and you’ve enumerated enough negatives for me to think this won’t be the one to change my mind.
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I enjoyed this a bit more than you did, I think, but I agree that it was lacking in suspense and the setting did feel more like the 19th century than the 20th. I’m still interested in trying Michelle Paver’s earlier books, which sound quite different from this one.
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I liked her series set in Jamaica and meant to buy this when in London last spring. Her adult fiction does not appear to have been published in the US.
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What a shame this wasn’t better for you.
Thanks for sharing your review with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge
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