Book Blurb
One hot day in Elizabethan York, young Nell Appleby is trapped in a wooden chest, and a horror of the stifling dark - and of the man who trapped her - dogs her for the rest of her life. Wed to the sadistic Ralph Maskewe, Nell must find joy where she can, until the return of her childhood sweetheart offers a chance of flight to the New World. Will Nell risk all to escape the dark at last?
Four and a half centuries later, Tess and her small son Oscar move to York. Eager to start a new life, away from her overbearing and manipulative husband, Martin, Tess tries to put her marriage behind her. But time in York has a way of shifting strangely, and memories of a past that is not her own begin to surface with disturbing effect. Living two lives, torn between two worlds, Tess must unlock the secrets of the past before she can free herself - and Nell -once and for all.
My review
Monk Bar - York, England |
This is a
great, gripping mystery story. I loved reading it for two main reasons:
it is set in an English town I love for its beauty and history, and it conveys
with vivid realism the stories of two extraordinary
ordinary women.
The
supernatural element, a constant travelling through time, is the device Pamela
Hartshorne chooses to connect the two story-lines. The narration quickly
shifts from Elizabethan York and Nell's hard, tragic life enlightened only by her passionate love for Tom, to present-day
York, where Tess struggles to overcome the wreckage of her marriage and to
protect her son and herself from the
rage of Martin, the man she is hiding from, her husband.
The
rich descriptive pattern and the care for the details let the readers live in their
minds the changes of landscape Tess herself experiences, comparing and
contrasting the charms of present and past York. Tess finds herself distressed
and displaced, when she realizes that what is happening to her is not
simply "dreaming" another person's life, Nell's life in the 16th
century.
In
York, her shelter while trying to escape from her abusing husband, Tess finds
the reassuring presence of Luke, a man she deeply loved in the
past, and the disquieting reality of frightening, mysterious sounds coming from
walls of the old house she moves in. Haunting and
demanding, Nell enters Tess’s life that way and won't leave it before she gets
what she wants.
The Shambles - York, England |
The
two women, despite their differences and the barrier of hundreds of years
between them, share a tragic destiny: both married to abusive husbands: Nell
was forced to marry sadistic Ralph Maskewe and to forget her dream of
marrying his younger brother, Tom, instead; Tess was deceived into an un happy marriage by charming, handsome, but
pathologically narcissistic, Martin. The violence Nell
experiences is physical and brutal, in Tess’s case, it is more subtle and psychological. However, in both cases, the two women are alone
and prisoners of their fears as well as of their husbands' powerful and unsimpathetic grip. The worst is that nobody
seems to actually see or understands what really happens to them.
Incredibly
enough, Tess and Nell, prisoners of the past, bound by love and fear, will help each other. Nell needs Tess to reveal the
world what happened to her and to be finally re-united with her daughter,
somehow. Tess will grow up and find the
strength to choose what is right for her
and her son Oskar, she will decide to stand up and to react to Martin, and all that thanks to Nell.
It's
an intense story which takes the reader on a thrilling, dramatic journey,
blending romance and brutal domestic violence, supernatural and accurate
historical fiction, psychological insight and action.
I gave this book 5 well deserved stars out of 5 on goodreads.
The Memory of Midnight is the second novel by the author of Time's Echo, Pamela Hartshorne
The Memory of Midnight is available at amazon.co.uk and amazon.com
Great review of a brilliant novel. MG. Pamela's writing makes you feel you are walking the street of both contemporary and Elizabethan York. By the way, I saw Pamela yesterday in Waterstones York and we talked about you. Ciao. Antonella
ReplyDeleteCiao A.! I'm flattered.Two lovely ladies were talking of humble, plain ME at Waterstones York?!? Well, I've been thinking of both of you while reading the book and writing my review :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading and commenting. BIG HUG! MG
Yikes! You're making me very afraid to visit a certain old house in York - there could be anyone in there, perhaps Ralph Maskewe or someone even more frightening.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the excellent review!
Thank you, June, for reading and commenting. York is a charming medieval town, I recommend you to visit it witout any fear. (Ralph and Martin are two quite scary men, actually) And I recommend you the reading of this very good book, too. Enjoy your Sunday!
ReplyDelete