Winter is the perfect opportunity for catching up on your
reading list, especially Christmas when it is dark outside, and inside Christmas
lights and flickering candles create the perfect ambience for a ghostly tale. Whilst
M R James and Sheridan Le Fanu are my usual Christmas go-to authors, it’s nice
when unexpected delights fall into the Christmas reading pile. Here are four thumping
good reads to pass the dreary nights of winter with.
Now fans of Tom Burke will know that the author Arthur
Calder-Marshall is Tom’s maternal grandfather, I’ve been interested to read
some of his work for a while, so I was delighted when I came across a couple of
second-hand books written by him.
If you love a good haunted house tale, then this first story
is certainly a book for you, it is suitably eerie and will give you the required
goose bumps when reading!
The Scarlet Boy –
Arthur Calder-Marshall
The tale is narrated by George Grantley. He receives a
letter from his friend Sir Christopher “Kit” Everness in 1959, proclaiming it
was time for the Everness family to settle down, and would George assist them in
finding their dream home. The family specify that the house has to be in
Wilchester, close to a day school as their daughter, Rosa, hates the boarding
school she goes to, and be a large, run down property with a garden that they
can make their own.
George agrees to the task and learns that Anglesey House is
up for sale and he thinks it would be perfect. George remembers the property
from when he was a child, playing with his friend Charles Scarlet. Although
they were friends, George remembered that Charles was a wilful and vicious
child, wanting to play games involving torture. It was as though Charles was
possessed by the spirit of someone else. He had a tree house in the garden and
whilst still a child he fell and broke his neck. George had always been fond of
Charles’s mother as she was “beautiful and gracious” unlike his own mother, so
he continued to visit the house even after Charles’s suicide.
“A disturbing adult
novel of an innocents encounter with unearthly evil...”
George tells Kit that he has found a house for the family,
but rumours abound that the place is haunted. Kit takes no heed of George’s
warning and so the family moves in…
Whilst on the surface the book is an eerie ghostly tale,
there are underlying layers about family relationships, people’s faith, beliefs
and the paranormal. After the family have settled in, Rosa is overheard talking
to Charles and another child who had taken his life a long, long time ago, and when
Rosa disappears, a struggle needs to be fought between the forces of good and
evil.
There were elements of Henry James’s “The
Turn of the Screw” in Arthur Calder-Marshall’s tale, and in this next book, the
encounters to be had are as equally disturbing as those in the James novel, mixed up with a bit of The Woman in Black!
Genre: Horror, Classics, British
Literature
Release Date: 1st January
1962
Publisher: Corgi
Pages: 190
“Disclosure: If you buy books linked to this
site, I may earn a small commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support
independent bookshops, at no extra cost to you.”
The Silent Companions –
Laura Purcell
When Elsie married Rupert Bainbridge, she could not foresee
that within a few weeks of marriage, her husband would be dead, and she would
be sent to his country estate to lay him to rest, and to wait out her pregnancy.
Set in Victorian England, Elsie’s journey sees her leaving
her London home at a matchstick factory to take an eventful carriage ride to “The
Bridge” through foggy, muddy, countryside. Much to her horror, Elsie realises
that her late husband’s country pile is a crumbling estate, and the villagers show open hostility towards her. Her arrival at the house is no better as the
servants appear irritated by her intrusion into their daily lives.
Rupert’s coffin lies at The Bridge, pending his burial at
the local church, and with only his cousin for company, Elsie sets out to
discover the secrets of the property she must spend her confinement in. Inside
the house is a locked door to which there is no key. She asks the housekeeper
to obtain a copy and one day she sees the door open. Thinking the doorkeeper
has unlocked the door, Elsie discovers a room with a painted wooden figure in
it. The creepy thing is, the key has not yet arrived, and now the wooden figure
has been removed from the room, the door is now locked again, and this Silent
Companion looks remarkable like Elsie herself!
Everyone at The Bridge is terrified of the figure, although
Elsie laughs off all the rumours as idle superstition – it is only a wooden figurine after all,
but then she notice’s the eyes keep following her, and as each day passes, new Silent
Companions arrive.
As the book flicks back and forth between Elsie’s residence at St
Joseph’s Hospital and her memories of The Bridge, you are unnerved yet
compelled to keep reading. "I trust people and they abuse that trust." It is an atmospheric page turner, full of spine-tingling
revelations as you become more and more engrossed with the intense horror of
how vivid and complex the human mind can be.
What are Silent
Companions?
Silent Companions, or
Dummy Boards, were life-sized, flat, wooden boards, painted Tromp l’oeil style
to resemble figures. They were highly popular in the 18th and 19th
centuries, especially in England and The Netherlands. They were often placed in
the corner of rooms, or on staircases, to surprise visitors to the grand
houses. It is also thought that during the summer months when the occupants
were away, they would be placed strategically around the house to protect the
house and keep thieves at bay. Dummy boards showed all aspects of life, from
servants to noblemen and even the family dog!
Genre: Fiction, Historical Fiction, Gothic,
Paranormal, Mystery
Release Date: 5th April 2018
Publisher: Raven Books
Pages: 384
“Disclosure: If you buy books linked to this
site, I may earn a small commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support
independent bookshops, at no extra cost to you.”
The Magic of My Youth –
Arthur Calder-Marshall
Back to Tom’s grandfather! The Magic of My Youth is an altogether
different novel from The Scarlet Boy. Autobiographical, it tells the tale of
when Arthur met the legendary Aleister Crowley, the self-styled “Beast of the
Apocalypse” and magician of black magic.
The foreword of the book states how Arthur never intended to
write the novel, but that following a day of making notes in an exercise book,
twenty-five years after the meetings with The Beast had taken place, memories
were surfacing, and as they flowed, a book was taking shape. “Lengthy
conversations are not remembered verbatim over a quarter of a century” but what
follows is a book full of recollections of meeting a man who has been described
as the most evil man on earth.
Arthur Calder-Marshall was interested in both the occult and
Crowley during his years of adolescence, a time when young people try to find out who they
really are. His brother would relay tales to Arthur that he had heard from a
wife whose husband had been sacrificed by Crowley in the Abbey of Thelema and
Vickybird, an eccentric poet who claimed he had been turned into a zebra whilst
in the middle of the Sahara! With tales such as these, who wouldn’t be
interested in Aleister Crowley?!
Set in the glittering 1920’s, a period “when to be ‘earnest’
was to be unfashionable” Calder-Marshall had the idea of hosting Black Masses in
his rooms at Oxford and inviting Crowley to give a poetry reading…it was this invitation
that would open the door to his meetings with Crowley.
“Crowley’s literary
work was in fact curious only by reason of its dullness” A C-M
Well like a moth to a flame I had to see if that was true,
so I sat and read both The Book of Lies and The Book of the Law by Aleister
Crowley. Dull is one way of describing both works, confused is another! Either way, I’m not intending to write a review of them!
(And for those thinking I’m about to be sucked into a path of evil for reading
such literature, I would say that you cannot give a considered opinion of any
writer, if you refuse to read their works without an open mind first.)
Unlike Crowley, Calder-Marshall had a great aptitude for writing.
His curiosity about magic in a time when Bloomsbury was filled with writers and
artists partying and drinking their nights away is captured in these pages; as
a young man battles with his beliefs, knowing at the end of it all, all he
really wants to do is write!
The Devil’s Paintbrush –
Jake Arnott
I first “met” Aleister Crowley in another of Jake Arnott’s
books, The House of Rumour. I had seen a photograph of Tom Burke carrying the
book, and being of an inquisitive nature, I bought a copy! I loved the
juxtaposition of real-life people and events being worked into a piece of
fiction, and after buying Arnott's book The Fatal Tree on pre-order, I made it my
mission to keep an eye out at second hand book stores for some of his earlier
works. The Devil’s Paintbrush has been patiently waiting for me to find the “right
time” to be read!
Major General Sir Hector MacDonald (Fighting Mac) was a distinguished
Victorian soldier. Born in 1843, the son of a crofter, he joined the Gordon
Highlanders regiment and worked his way through the army ranks until he became
Major General. Many in the army looked down on this working-class boy, who achieved
everything he did on merit, rather than pedigree. He was a master tactician and
was credited with saving hundreds of British soldiers lives in 1898 in North
Africa and was rewarded with a knighthood.
He was the people’s hero, especially back home in Edinburgh.
In 1903 he was sent to Ceylon to instil discipline into the army. He was disliked
by those around him, and rumours circulated about his sexuality. If he was gay,
he would be outed and thrown out of the army; don’t forget this was a period
when homosexuality was a criminal offence, and the punishment was harsh, as seen
in the trial of Oscar Wilde in 1895.
MacDonald was sent back to Britain following allegations of “dubious
acts,” however, he was sent back to Ceylon almost straight away to face a court
martial. He travelled to Ceylon via Paris, The Devil’s Paintbrush takes up the
true story of his encounter with Aleister Crowley; all be it an elaborate
retelling of Fighting Mac’s one night in Paris!
In Le Chat Blanc, a Parisienne restaurant, Aleister Crowley
(occultist) meets Sir Hector (British hero) and this unlikely duo transport the
reader back to the battlefields of Sudan, and the backstreets of Edinburgh
where Sir Hector met the young Christine Duncan.
It is a beautifully written book knitting together fact and
fiction, taking a historical figure that has long been forgotten and giving him
a voice to air his story. Arnott develops a picture of not only the General but
also Crowley himself; two very complex and different personalities. The predicament
MacDonald finds himself in is examined with compassion, whilst the depraved
drive of Crowley is explored without moralising. Arnott shows that being inherently
good can be just as debilitating as being evil. As readers we’re not asked to
take sides, but to consider the full picture of two flamboyant characters as
Fighting Mac’s tragic secret leads the book to its poignant ending.
Genre: Fiction, Historical Fiction,
Queer Lit,
Release Date: 1st January
2010
Publisher: Sceptre
Pages: 298
“Disclosure: If you buy books linked to this
site, I may earn a small commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support
independent bookshops, at no extra cost to you.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.