Tag Archives: historical fantasy

ROSE OF JERICHO

By Alex Grecian

This was a truly odd and engaging read. But I’ll say from the beginning, you have to like weird, and you have to be able to tolerate a generous amount of gore. Those aren’t usually for me, but I found this to be the most unique thing I’ve read in a long time. Because it was so different, I found it very compelling.

The setting is nineteenth-century New England where witch hunters still stalk their prey and where women with psychic powers try to blend into a community where nothing is normal anymore. Ascension was meant to be a quiet, rural village—a respite from frenetic city life and maybe it would have been. Except that the house on the hill is haunted with dozens of ghosts all with their own stories to tell. They are just a distraction because the town’s problems run far deeper and reach back into time. And now the dead aren’t dying anymore.

Rose, Sadie Grace, and Rabbit arrive in Ascension to take care of Rose’s sick cousin. Only the cousin, previously on her deathbed, has risen and made a miraculous recovery…or has she? Turns out the town is full of people who should be in their graves but are not. Stories circulate that Ascension isn’t the only town experiencing these phenomena. Meanwhile the reason why the death no longer visits earth is headed straight to Ascension for an epic confrontation.

Witches, witch hunters, ghosts, demons, and angels are all afoot in the world created by Alex Grecian. An exciting and creative read.   

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Down the Treacle Well Trailer:

Happy publication day! Here is the trailer. PLEASE SHARE.

ORDER HERE: choose your favorite store below

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OWL KILLERS by Karen Maitland

Owl Killers

During the Middle Ages, a lay group of women dedicated to a life of prayer, hard work, and community service thrived in the Low Countries. Known as the Beguines, Karen Maitland imagines what it might have been like for a group of these women to have struck out on their own to settle in an unwelcoming English town. The atmosphere is tense as the women are seen as outsiders, not part of Mother Church and not part of the resident pagan tradition either. The women bring their ideas of Christian charity to the townsfolk who regard them with suspicion and sometimes open hostility. As the village suffers through a series of disasters, the power of the Church is threatened, dark forces from earlier times reawaken, and the beguines must decide to make a stand or return to the safety of their continental shores.

Karen Maitland novel is well-researched and executed. The story is told from the various viewpoints of the characters in the town of Ulewic. In this way, we learn each of the beguine’s has her own history and her own reasons for joining the group. We understand the struggles of the local priest as he fits into a system that leaves him little room for personal choice. A nobleman’s daughter helps us feel the restrictions of living as a young woman in Medieval society. An array of townsfolk completes the cast. The Owl Killers are a group of masked men who harken back to a day before law and order. They are definitely flesh and blood and do their share of evil, but Maitland has, at times, blurred the line. Although most of the story feels firmly planted in third dimensional reality, there are a few places where things take on an otherworldly creepiness. Man’s ability for cruelty can be disturbing and this book certainly has those moments. The ending may leave you wanting more or maybe something else entirely.

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