The Silent Companions
The perfect spooky tale to curl up with this summer
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- $18.99
Publisher Description
LAURA PURCELL'S THRILLING NEW NOVEL THE WHISPERING MUSE IS OUT NOW
Winner of the W H Smith Thumping Good Read Award
As featured on the Radio 2 Book Club and the Zoe Ball ITV Book Club
'[An] extraordinary, memorable and truly haunting book' Jojo Moyes
'[It] shone, for originality for the sheer quality of the writing, the characters and some masterly chills' Peter James
Some doors are locked for a reason...
Newly married, newly widowed Elsie is sent to see out her pregnancy at her late husband's crumbling country estate, The Bridge.
With her new servants resentful and the local villagers actively hostile, Elsie only has her husband's awkward cousin for company. Or so she thinks. For inside her new home lies a locked room, and beyond that door lies a two-hundred-year-old diary and a deeply unsettling painted wooden figure – a Silent Companion – that bears a striking resemblance to Elsie herself...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Purcell's debut is an atmospheric, eerie Victorian gothic novel centered around a decaying English country estate. Elsie has married into the Bainbridge family, which "had a nasty habit of losing their heirs." Her own family history is similarly grim, her father having died gruesomely in an accident at the family's matchstick factory. The two households, both alike in tragedy, unite, and the result is predictably disastrous. Elsie's new husband dies suddenly, leaving her the sole mistress of his ancestral estate, the Bridge, with its distrustful servants and collection of lifelike wooden props, "not a statue or a painting but somewhere in between." These figures multiply, assuming the likenesses of people from the house's and Elsie's history alike. Are they manifestations of Elsie's subconscious fears, or malevolent forces of evil? Purcell skillfully maintains the ambiguity as she splinters the story into three timelines: Elsie's stay at the estate over the winter of 1865; Elsie in a psychiatric hospital shortly thereafter, rendered mute and amnesiac after being accused of murder and arson; and a 17th-century account (found in an old diary) that sheds light on the origin of the evil lurking within the estate. Purcell's novel is more formulaic than, say, Sarah Waters's The Little Stranger, but its combustible tale of a 19th-century woman tormented by an English country house's creepy curios does produce sparks.