What if the life you
were remembering wasn’t your own?
Pamela Hartshorne knows how to
intrigue her readers. This is the fourth of her time slip, historical fiction
novels I’ve read, and each time I've found myself hooked from the first lines and
wanting to go through the pages as quick as possible to uncover the mysteries
surrounding the protagonists. I was travelling through Scotland (the book is set in Yorkshire, in the North of England) while reading
House of Shadows and I longed to open my copy on any possible occasion and was late at night to go on reading.
It is a haunting story shifting constantly and twistingly between two time lines, from a present-day reality to the alluring Tudor Era,
but with only one place as its heart: Askerby Hall, the house of
shadows.
The central character, Kate
Vavasour, wakes up from a coma in a hospital bed and the reader can follow her
confused, uncertain steps back to life from right inside her mind, where she is
convinced she is someone else, Isabel Vavasour, and where there is no sign of
recognition of any of the worried people surrounding her.
She can vivdly remember Isabel’s life, her love for
her handsome husband, Edmund, and the
overwhelming tenderness she felt becoming the mother of their son, Kit. Kate realizes she is not Isabel,
especially because that young woman lived under the reign of the other Queen
Elizabeth, and perfectly knows that
all she sees around her belongs to a totally
different present. Still her mind goes on working very oddly and Isabel is a constant haunting presence. Kate find herself incapable of feeling anything for her own son, Felix, nor she recalls mourning her late husband, Michael. She has no memory of them, she has forgotten the feelings she felt for them and, definitely, she can’t explain
why she climbed up Askerby tower, from which she fell down and only miraculously survived.
Can the whispers in a House of Shadows across time explain the past and clear up the future?
Once Kate is back to Askerby Hall,
where Isabel had lived in the 16th century and where she herself had gone on living with little Felix after
Michael’s death as a guest of her parents-in-law, the rich and aristocratic
Vavasours, her mind seems to start
remembering more and more both of Isabel’s life and from of her own.
However, the feeling which prevails in Kate’s mind in that house of shadows and mysteries is a
terrifying fear. Moreover, as she starts recalling her own emotions and
her own memories, Isabel emerges back from her mind with increasingly
disturbing facts urging Kate to help her
look for her little son, Kit.
I remember meeting Pamela
Harsthorne in York in March 2015 while she was writing this novel, which still
had no title. She had already written 3 novels set in York and in the Tudor Era
(Time's Echo, The Memory of Midnight, The Edge of Dark) and her publishers wanted three more.
How to come out with something based on the same successful layout of time-slip plus a double female protagonist parallel narrative pattern without sounding repetetive? When you are a very professional and very talented writer, you find the way. Very well done, Pamela. Brilliant job. House of Shadows is intriguing, absorbing, compelling, fast-paced, smart, well-written, with a solidly constructed plot and believable, gripping characters.
How to come out with something based on the same successful layout of time-slip plus a double female protagonist parallel narrative pattern without sounding repetetive? When you are a very professional and very talented writer, you find the way. Very well done, Pamela. Brilliant job. House of Shadows is intriguing, absorbing, compelling, fast-paced, smart, well-written, with a solidly constructed plot and believable, gripping characters.
I can assure you all, being
visiting ancient Scottish castles and historic sites said to be haunted by
ghosts during the day and reading Kate/Isabel’s mystery tale at night was the
perfect match for a highly thrilling 10 days’ experience. Unforgettable.
In conclusion, let me make my heartfelt recommendation: if you like a good historical psychological
thriller with romance and supernatural elements, you must read House of Shadows.
Book Blurb
When Kate Vavasour wakes in
hospital, she can remember nothing about the family gathered around her bed, or
of her life before the accident. The doctors diagnose post-traumatic amnesia
and say the memories should start returning. Which they do . . . but these
memories are not her own. They belong to Isabel Vavasour, who lived and died at
Askerby Hall over four hundred years earlier . . .
Returning to Askerby Hall to
recuperate, Kate finds herself in a house full of shadows and suspicions.
Unable to recognise her family, her friends or even her small son, she
struggles to piece together the events that led to her terrible fall. Life at
Askerby, it seems, is not as illustrious as the Vavasours would have the public
believe. But before she can uncover the mysteries of the present, she must
first discover the truth about the past ... Was Isabel's madness real, or was
her mistake trusting the one person she thought would never betray her?
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