The Afterlives of Georges Perec
Rowan Wilken and Justin Clemens
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Georges Perec (1936-82) was a French novelist, filmmaker, documentalist and Rowan Wilken is...
The No.2 Global Detective
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Cuff College of Transgression and Pathology, Oxford. The quiet of the evening is shattered by the...
Architecture and Lanscape in Medieval Anatolia, 1100-1500
Patricia Blessing and Rachel Goshgarian
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Anatolia was home to a large number of polities in the medieval period. Given its location at the...
The World of Lore: Wicked Mortals (The World of Lore #2)
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A chilling, lavishly illustrated who's-who of the most despicable people ever to walk the earth,...
Never Greener
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The past has a habit of tracking us down. And tripping us up. When Kate was twenty-two, she had...
City of Ghosts
Book
Cassidy Blake's parents are The Inspectres, a (somewhat inept) ghost-hunting team. But Cass herself...
Heroes and Villains
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After a previous case got him sidelined to a drugs investigation, DS Scott Cullen of Police...
Billie Wichkan (118 KP) rated The Haunting of Henderson Close in Books
May 22, 2019
Hannah has relocated to Edinburgh and now works as a performing tour guide regaling tourists with the goings on in the spooky derelict Henderson Close. Together with colleagues they bring the past to life as they play the parts of real people who lived there and spin tales of the spooky and historical past, some really gruesome. But then she starts to see shadows, she has flashes where she feels weird and, well, has some really rather scary experiences. But she's not alone, one of the other guides has experienced similar and then some of the tourists also start to see things. What is happening? Are the legends and stories of what went before coming back? Who are the people that Hannah keeps seeing, and what do they really want?
I was intrigued by the classification of The Haunting of Henderson Close as a horror, mystery and thriller novel as these are my favourites.
I loved all the hints at ghosts and supernatural activity but sadly it all got a bit confusing for me as it progressed. The flashbacks and present just seemed to clash and not move seamlessly together. At times I felt possibly the author meant for the book to be more of a Victorian mystery rather than supernatural.
The use of location was one of the main strengths of the book, as the descriptions of 19th century Edinburgh were detailed and made it easy to imagine just what Victorian Scotland used to look like; really amazing and descriptive.
The ending I found a bit lacking as I had an idea built u in my of something climatic and it wasn’t.
The story itself intrigued me, the setting especially; all in all, a story that kept my attention nicely throughout and left me mostly satisfied at its conclusion.
My thanks go to the Publisher and Netgalley for the chance to read this book.
The Man Who Was Jekyll and Hyde: The Lives and Crimes of Deacon Brodie
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He was a respected cabinetmaker and councillor by day - but Deacon William Brodie changed into a...
The Man Who Would be Sherlock: The Real Life Adventures of Arthur Conan Doyle
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When Arthur Conan Doyle was a lonely seven-year-old schoolboy at pre-prep Newington Academy in...