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Isla Rising - by Pj Johnson (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- It is 1833, and fiery Edinburgh widow Isla is dying.
- Author(s): Pj Johnson
- 174 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Ghost
Description
About the Book
It is 1833, and fiery Edinburgh widow Isla is dying, but her death is only the beginning As a spirit, Isla must deal with grave-robbers, ancient mysteries and earth bound ghosts in order to protect her granddaughter and locate her love.
Book Synopsis
It is 1833, and fiery Edinburgh widow Isla is dying. Ready to meet her maker and eager to reunite with the love of her life, she is not afraid of passing, but Isla's death is only the beginning of a series of otherworldly adventures that she must undertake on her quest to find her husband. As a spirit, Isla must deal with grave-robbers, ancient mysteries and earth bound ghosts in order to protect her granddaughter and locate her love. Culminating in the glowing bonfires of a lawless and blistering Samain, when the bold dead walk among the living, Isla Rising ranges from the arcane to the humorous, as the wild widow stalks through the shadowy depths of Edinburgh's homes and cemeteries, pubs and plots.Review Quotes
'a glittering and sensitive work of speculative fiction' - Iris Lavell, author of Elsewhere in Success
PJ Johnson's hugely enjoyable debut novel Isla Rising not only (re)animates the living and the dead alike with her vivid prose; she resurrects a 19th-century Edinburgh, with all its darkness, dangers, and superstitions, such that you're drawn inexorably into this romantic adventure of love beyond the grave without ever once doubting its veracity. One of the heroes is even a cat! What's not to like?
Will Yeoman, The West Australian
I don't go much for whimsy, nor do I easily suspend disbelief - so I can't tell you how delighted I was to be drawn into Isla's last brief moments before her out of body experience by your charming telling of the tale. Belle was as believable a character as any of the others while retaining her innate feline nature in every respect. I read the book straight through - not just because it was easy to read but because it led me cunningly on through a well-wrought and written plot with everything going for it - love, loss, mystery, goodness and evil, laughter and sorrow. You retained the quaint turns of the Scottish vernacular admirably throughout without it being too intrusive - as also the tricky use of the present tense.
The grisly grave robbing scenes and climax of the Samain night were convincing historically - and gripping. I don't know that the story was even all that fanciful. Many people - including me - have felt the lingering presence of a recently departed loved one for quite a while - before they get accustomed to their new state and gradually fade away.
It could make a film with wonderful scope for special effects.
I hope you enjoyed writing it as much as I enjoyed reading it.
Many congratulations.
With all best wishes
Patsy Millett - author of Inseparable Elements