Fotografía de autor

L R Fredericks

Autor de Farundell

3 Obras 68 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Obras de L R Fredericks

Farundell (2010) 46 copias
Fate (2012) 14 copias
The Book of Luce (2015) 8 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

Oh what to say? I loved it... It wasn't the amazing shock I got while reading Farundell, this time I knew what to expect and welcomed it with open arms of familiar recognition, but it still turned things upside down. What a life!
Now I want more, of course... from 24 onwards, Paul and Francis and Alice and Theo...
 
Denunciada
ScarletBea | Apr 3, 2013 |
I was immediately drawn to the cover of this book, and indeed the blurb promises much too…

"There’s an enigmatic book, an erotic obsession, magic both black and white, a ghost who’s not a ghost, a murder that’s not a murder, a treasure that’s not a treasure."

Who wouldn’t be tempted by that. The blurb also mentions Brideshead Revisited, and there are superficial similarities – the book is set in an ancestral pile and features an eccentric family into which an outsider is invited, but that’s where the parallels end really. The mystery of it made me hope for something akin to Lindsay Clarke’s wonderful novel The Chymical Wedding which delves deep into alchemy and the hermetic tradition, a book I must re-read soon – but it wasn’t as profound as that novel. It was, however, an enjoyable debut, and I gather it is to be the first in a series featuring the characters within.

Let me tell you a little about the story… Set in 1924, Paul Asher is at a loss what to do after his wartime experiences, he is still somewhat shell-shocked and estranged from his father. He accepts an invitation to Farundell from a friend to help the renowned Amazon explorer Percy Damory, now old and blind, to write his memoirs. There he meets the eccentric Damory family – a rather Bohemian clan. Of the Damory children, teenager Alice is the most interesting at the start. She is always curious and wants to be grown up.

Paul starts off well at the house – he feels at home. Then one day he sees the family ghost and this will be the start of surreal experiences to come. It turns out that several of the family regularly see Francis the ancestral ghost and have out of body experiences (they call it their ‘moon-bodies’) communing with him. Then Percy’s grand-daughter Sylvie arrives down from London and Paul instantly and totally falls in passionate love. Sylvie, gratifyingly for Paul, consents to fall totally in love lust. They can’t keep their relationship secret, indeed Sylvie’s parents and grandfather thoroughly approve, and there’s soon a lot of sex going on. At the same time, Paul, having had his eyes opened to the ghost, begins to use his moon-body too.

Interspersed with this are Percy’s memories of his explorations and encounters in the jungle with fearful tribes and potent drugs and associated out of body experiences; the precocious Alice seeking answers; and a mysterious book that Paul becomes obsessed by – it is reputed to hold the secrets of the Farundell treasure that great-great-grandfather Francis had brought back to the estate. The ghost Francis isn’t telling though, he continues to play mind-games with them; all except Aunt Theo who has chosen not to use her moon-body – hinting of the dangers to come.

There’s a lot in this book, although at times it can be quite rambling and at the start all the family characters can be rather confusing. There are a lot of different sub-plots going on which I haven’t mentioned above. I did need respite from Paul and Sylvie’s rampant rutting though, so they were perhaps necessary after all!

I did like the setting, the grand country house is very alluring with its secret passageways and wonderful views. The grounds complete with huge lake, island, chapel and Greco/Egyptian temples, and not forgetting its own model village, feels like a theme park you need never leave. The period is also potent; people are just starting to find themselves again after the Great War, and letting go one by one with abandon.

I couldn’t decide whether this book was wanting to be a family drama or a surreal fantasy. I though it ended up trying to be both and not quite succeeding. There was much to like and I enjoyed it, but was left slightly disappointed. I would however, probably read more by this debut author.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
gaskella | Apr 2, 2011 |

Premios

Estadísticas

Obras
3
Miembros
68
Popularidad
#253,411
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
16

Tablas y Gráficos