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Sandra Arnold

Autor von The ash, the well & the bluebell

4 Werke 8 Mitglieder 2 Rezensionen

Werke von Sandra Arnold

Tomorrow's Empire (2000) 2 Exemplare
The bones of the story (2023) 1 Exemplar

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THE ASH THE WELL AND THE BLUEBELL is one of those novels that's categorised as crime but takes the expectations that come with that and tips them out the nearest window. The blurb describes the scenario well:

"Losing her daughter to the Christchurch earthquake sends Lily back to her childhood village in northern England to scatter Charlie's ashes. It's a place of ghosts for Lily after the mysterious drowning of a school friend at the old village well - a tragedy somehow linked to the death of a local woman accused of witchcraft three hundred years earlier. Now Lily's back, she wants to find out what happened at the well and the truth behind the swift departure of her friend Israel."

What that doesn't describe is the emotional roller coaster that the novel takes readers on. The death of Lily's daughter Charlie in the earthquake that rocked Christchurch in 2011 is carefully described and all the more distressing because of that. The ribbon of blood that comes from Charlie as Lily and she are pinned to the ground, connects to the journey that this triggers as Lily returns to her childhood home in England, and to thoughts of childhood experiences. It's these childhood memories that lead, eventually, to recollection of a friend's suspicious death, and mystique of the well where a local woman was drowned many years before, accused of being a witch.

Carefully, steadily told, the world that is described in THE ASH THE WELL AND THE BLUEBELL covers everything from small town English life immediately following the Second World War, back to the time of witch trials, through to the Child Migrant schemes that sent children from England to New Zealand and Australia in the 50's and onwards to the 2011 earthquake.

The well is an interesting focal point for the story, reflected as it is in the sort of slow whirlpool of events that surround Lily. From the death of her daughter, to the remembrance of childhood events, to the connections between old friends, and home. Places and people, childhood and adult responsibilities, life, death and the things that start to make sense the older we get, are all pulled into action that doesn't necessarily speed up as it goes, but continues in it's relentless, consuming spin until everything has been pulled into its wake.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/ash-well-and-bluebell-sandra-arnold
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austcrimefiction | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 18, 2020 |
(7.5)Following the death of her daughter, Charlie in the Christchurch earthquake, Lily returns home to the village of her birth, Eshwell Bridge, England, to scatter ashes.
Her return stirs up memories of her childhood years and the events that occurred when she was 10 years old. A good friend, Christine, drowned in the old village well and her close friend Israel is sent as a child migrant to be raised by foster parents in New Zealand, as his family have many children and they can't financially support them. The well has a tragic history.
Lily, herself, left after completing her degree, to experience life in a kibbutz, where she meets her husband-to-be Seb, from New Zealand. When Seb is suddenly killed on a return visit to the kibbutz, Lily decides to raise their daughter, Charlie, in New Zealand.
On her return to Eshwell Bridge with charlie's ashes, she is reunited with her brother, Lawrence and discovers Israel has returned, now a successful musician. Together they learn the truth about their friend Christine's death.
There is an ever changing timeline spanning three centuries which provides historic context and it is easy to follow.
I am struggling to rate this story, as yes it brought a tear to the eye, but in other ways the ending is too predictable and nice to be real. There are too many co-incidences of time and place. I did enjoy it but it is more in the style of books I would have read 20 years ago and I have become more cynical with age.
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HelenBaker | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 16, 2020 |

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4
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4.0
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2
ISBNs
5