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- Publication: 1st June 2009
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- ISBN: 9-51903406429-5
- Sewn hardcover, limited to 400 copies,
75pps with decorative end papers and
frontispiece.
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- When young Lucian Miller visits the
house of a friend it is everything he had long
fantasised about; decay and grandeur, lofty rooms,
dark red shadows and dust. The evening, however, is a
disaster, and Lucian finds himself apparently alone
with the sophisticated but troubled Miranda Honeyman.
They shut all of the doors in an attempt to keep their
problems out, but it soon becomes apparent that
someone else may have access to the house. On the
threshold of adulthood, in a heightening atmosphere of
sexual uncertainty and violence, Lucian tries to make
sense of what is happening around him.
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- Bloody Baudelaire handles its
themes deftly, with a rare insight into human
character in extremis. An absolutely stunning
new novella from an upcoming master of the
fantastic!
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- $30 inc. p&p to Europe and USA,
$35 to the rest of the world.
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- Click here
to view the first few pages
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- "Russell ... mixes menace, mystery and
romance in a plot that keeps the reader teasingly
off-balance and guessing how matters will resolve
themselves until the tale’s final twist ending." -
Publishers
Weekly
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- "Russell is a master of subtlety,
enfolding the reader in a smart net of elegant prose
and ambiguous facts. A mainstream piece or a gothic
novella..? It's up to you to decide." - Mario Guslandi at
The
Zone
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- "...timeless elegance ... the book
maintains a rich aura of mystery and intrigue ... an
excellent study on human characters, flaws and all."
Highlander's
Book Reviews
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- "...a first rate weird tale wrapped in
multiple layers of tension that Mr. Russell expertly
stokes and manipulates." - Speculative
Fiction Junkie
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- "...a
jittery, intelligent conundrum that leaves the shadowy
questions raised by Cliffe House and its inhabitants
with readers well after the book has been placed back
on the shelf." - The
Grim Blogger.
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- "...it is
something seriously decadent and Dorian Gray and
Stephen Poliakoff and pre-Raphaelite ... with
Elizabeth-Bowen-esque nihilism of a fractured soul.
The Tabula Rasa of love ... and a rite of torture that
unfolds so slowly in such a quick book, one is driven
along by it. This whole force of onward fiction has a
very clever ending. I believed every word."
- Des Lewis,
Weirdmonger
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- "Gripping" - Reggie Oliver
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- To order please go to the
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