Oxford, 1935 M. R. James, Britain’s greatest
writer of ghost stories, is summoned by the Warden of
Old College to investigate the inscription on an ancient
stone mirror. But he finds himself drawn into a dark
maze of secrets, including one from his own guilty past.
Oxford, 1665 At a time when established
orthodoxies are being challenged by the new science,
Warden Woodward of Old College has acquired the same
mirror. He soon suspects conspiracy and witchcraft in a
city besieged by plague. Assailed by devastating
visions, caught between fears of an ancient curse and
the World Wars of the future, two men from different
centuries delve into a forgotten mystery and are forced
to confront their own demons. But is self-reflection the
most dangerous thing of all? And are there some words
that can kill? “What is read cannot be unread...”
Stella Rimington said: “Necromancy, witchcraft and
gruesome goings on among the dreaming spires. This
historically based, well researched and beautifully
written blood chiller will have you looking over your
shoulder for nameless horrors. Beware of the ending,
particularly if you suffer from bad dreams.” Frances
Cairncross said: “Alasdair Donaldson has written a
splendidly spooky first novel, vividly combining the
horrors of plague-ridden 17th century Oxford with
mysterious goings on in the wintry city in the interwar
years. His creepy description of the deserted cloister
and turrets of ‘Old College’ over Christmas is
guaranteed to ensure that no undergraduate stays behind
in Oxford over the holidays.”
|
|