![]() * The Worm Hole * it excels is in its commentary on the treatment of Victorian women as well as its hair-raising and unsettling tone. ![]() ![]() It's got enough of the history that intrigues many people without treading the same path. It's well-researched and it puts a different spin on a well-used format. * Dreamcatcher * Bodies Of Water is a solid article. The book's ramifications shimmer on - frightful and transcendent in tidal irresistibilities. * Book Magpie * And, in the end, neither the heart of this book nor the nature of woman can possibly be reached, for to reach such ends would be to destroy them. It is quite a creepy, eerie and very atmospheric read and, for someone who has never liked the water much, a damn scary one at times. * Col's Criminal Library * The writing is simply gorgeous, at times lyrical and beautiful in its simplicity, with hints of magical realism/folklore and fantasy and the tension was always present throughout. For some reason that I can't articulate, I really liked the book, even though it is a million miles from my preferred reading genre. A real ghostly presence or imagined through some mental disintegration of our protagonists? I'm not quite sure and I don't think it matters. ![]() ![]() Â â â â Millie remains a haunting presence and influences both outcomes for Evelyn and Kirsten. ![]()
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