A mother with an empty nest is being haunted by a ghostly children's choir. Are they giving her an important message that only she can hear, or are their motives more sinister?
Louise Beeston is being haunted.
Louise has no reason left to stay in the city. She can't see her son, Joseph, who is away at boarding school, where he performs in a prestigious boys' choir. Her troublesome neighbor has begun blasting choral music at all hours of the night—and to make matters worse, she's the only one who can hear it.
Hoping to find some peace, Louise convinces her husband, Stuart, to buy them a country house in an idyllic, sun-dappled gated community called Swallowfield. But it seems that the haunting melodies of the choir have followed her there. Could it be that her city neighbor has trailed her to Swallowfield, just to play an elaborate, malicious prank? Is there really a ghostly chorus playing outside her door? And why won't they stop? Growing desperate, she begins to worry about her mental health.
Against the pleas and growing disquiet of her husband, Louise starts to suspect that this sinister choir is not only real but a warning. But of what? And how can it be, when no one else can hear it?
In The Orphan Choir, Sophie Hannah brings us along on a darkly suspenseful investigation of obsession, loss, and the malevolent forces that threaten to break apart a loving family.
Sophie Hannah is an internationally bestselling writer of psychological crime fiction, published in 27 countries. In 2013, her latest novel, The Carrier, won the Crime Thriller of the Year Award at the Specsavers National Book Awards. Two of Sophie’s crime novels, The Point of Rescue and The Other Half Lives, have been adapted for television and appeared on ITV1 under the series title Case Sensitive in 2011 and 2012. In 2004, Sophie won first prize in the Daphne Du Maurier Festival Short Story Competition for her suspense story The Octopus Nest, which is now published in her first collection of short stories, The Fantastic Book of Everybody’s Secrets.
Sophie has also published five collections of poetry. Her fifth, Pessimism for Beginners, was shortlisted for the 2007 T S Eliot Award. Her poetry is studied at GCSE, A-level and degree level across the UK. From 1997 to 1999 she was Fellow Commoner in Creative Arts at Trinity College, Cambridge, and between 1999 and 2001 she was a fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford. She is forty-one and lives with her husband and children in Cambridge, where she is a Fellow Commoner at Lucy Cavendish College. She is currently working on a new challenge for the little grey cells of Hercule Poirot, Agatha Christie’s famous detective.
In a quest to plow through some of my old, old NG titles I found this book on Hoopla and decided to listen. Big Mistake. There's a reason this book has only a 2.75 average and it's because it is HORRIBLE. Either I didn't know (in 2013 when I chose this book) or was way less picky, this book is not a psychological thriller (maybe psychological torture) it has dumb ghosts and they don't even appear until the end.
For most of the book we deal with Louise, the mom of a kid in boarding school because he's in a super special choir. Louise is AWFUL and whiny and hates "Don't Stop Me Now" by Queen and pretty much any noise. There are numerous plot holes and things that make no sense, like how on earth did these people afford two houses and who hates Queen?
Do yourself a favor and skip this one. Hannah has written better books (and some just as bad) but this one is terrible.
I'm becoming quite the expert on these Hammer horror novellas: first The Greatcoat, then The Daylight Gate, then The Quickening, and now this. The Orphan Choir is narrated by Louise Beeston, the mother of seven-year-old Joseph, who has won a much-coveted place in the choir of Saviour College School. Unfortunately, this privilege requires him to become a boarding pupil, and Louise is both depressed at the amount of time she has to spend separated from her son, and fearful that others will think her a bad parent for allowing him to live away from home at such a young age. On top of this, she has another problem - her nuisance neighbour Justin Clay, who plays loud, annoying music throughout the night. When Louise pleads with him to lower the volume and then complains to the council, he starts taunting her in more inventive ways, most notably by playing recordings of a boys' choir performing the same songs Joseph has to sing. Yet when questioned by a council worker, Justin insists he has never even owned any choral music, despite owning up to his other offences. So why does Louise keep hearing it?
I have mentioned before that despite Sophie Hannah's huge commercial success in the UK, I don't think she's a particularly good writer. It's always seemed so odd to me that she's also a poet, because her writing is the furthest thing from lyrical, and the main problem with fiction by poets is usually that it's difficult for them to stop their prose from sounding like poetry. Unfortunately, this book - despite initially appearing to be far more to my taste than her usual crime fare - didn't do anything to alter this negative opinion.
I wondered for a large portion of The Orphan Choir where it was actually going: the funny thing is that much more than half of the story is essentially exposition. Despite the fact that it's part of the Hammer imprint and is, you would assume, meant to be a horror story, there's no suggestion of anything supernatural until the book is near to its end, and it's not even slightly scary. The more I read, the more questions I had, and I was disappointed to find that many of them were never answered. How can it be possible for Louise and Stuart to own a Victorian townhouse in Cambridge, spend £30k on sandblasting it, AND afford to BUY a second home in a gated community with bespoke modernist houses and 500 acres of private land, unless they're multi-millionaires? And if they ARE meant to be multi-millionaires, surely Louise wouldn't feel inferior to the other mothers at her son's school and wouldn't talk about 'treating herself' to a fresh towel, costing £1, at the spa? Justin's occupation is similarly mysterious - he also lives in a townhouse, which (it's mentioned often) is lavishly decorated, yet the way he behaves makes it sound like he's a student: he doesn't get up until the afternoon, sits around getting stoned all day, and has raucous parties with a group of misfits. As for ? And what was up with ? So many intriguing strands of the plot weren't resolved at all, and some of the details were just laughable - the obsession with everyone having to be quiet all the time at Swallowfields (heavy-handed), and Louise saying she was 'on the road to becoming a drug addict' because she had a small bag of cannabis hidden in a drawer!
The Orphan Choir is not really a ghost story. It's more like a short psychological thriller with a horror element shoehorned in to make it relevant to the theme. A lot of the elements that make up the plot are actually really interesting: the combination of a problematic neighbour (a very realistic kind of horror) with hints of the supernatural; the the fact that Louise's sanity is questionable; the air of mystery surrounding her relationship with Stuart and what might have happened in the family before this story began. In fact, if it had been purely psychological with no ghost bits, it would probably have been better (and more scary!) As it is, it feels disjointed, as if it's been written in a hurry and needs about five rewrites to make proper sense.
Sophie Hannah fans might like this, I suppose. As a ghost story aficionado, I was not impressed at all. The best I can say about the book is that it's very readable and does keep you turning the pages - I wouldn't have wanted to give up on it without knowing what the ending would be. I saw a lot of promise in the plot, but the way it was executed left me disappointed. If you want a good, creepy, exciting ghost story, I recommend you spend your money on Julie Myerson's The Quickening instead.
This is the first book in years that has physically infuriated me. It gets 2 stars only because the protagonist gets what I wanted her to get at the end. This is the story of Louise Beeston, contender for most annoying mother of the year, who is plagued by a neighbour who plays loud music a few times and therefore, naturally, sends our hero into fits of absurd hysteria, and also has to contend with the pain of having her son away at a choir school, and she wants him back. One hundred pages in and she seemingly solves this little 'problem'. This whole section is boring and pointless and, most importantly, not scary. So, as a ghost story, this fails beyond anything I've ever read. I was more haunted by the sadness and melancholia of works like The Road, which did not have ghosts in it at all, and this just asserts the piss poor scares this book provides. A third of the way in, brief ghostly moment. Then nothing for another hundred, then mildly evocative ghostly moment then wild ending which came from nowhere. The main problem, and this is the reason I disliked the protagonist. She shouts a lot. Not just a bit, but all the time , when she isn't shouting at the council for not locking up her neighbour, she's shouting at her husband for not being more supportive, or she's shouting at her son's tutor for keeping him somehow, against her will. Then she shouts some more and moans and then, bizarrely, at the end she flips completely and becomes so calm and eerie I think she inhaled a truck load of drugs. The narrative that Sophie Hannah utilises is a choice which is very popular at the moment and I fail to see how. The problem with a first person present tense is that the writing cannot help but feel sloppy and this is no exception. The language is basic, which is fine, except that the way one though flows to the next reads at times like a stream of consciousness, which means we're stuck in the fucking diarrhoea that is the protagonist's bowel of a brain. In conclusion: not scary, stick to psychological thrillers please.
This ghost story is built around Anglican ritual, specifically choral evensong, the sung version of the service of evening prayer according to the traditional Book of Common Prayer, as it would be observed in the chapel of a Cambridge college. The college here is called Saviour. It boasts an excellent choir of sixteen boys who reside at college during term time. Our narrator, Louise or Lou, is the mother of one of the youngest choristers, Joseph, age seven.
It is obvious from the beginning of The Orphan Choir that Lou is in a severely debilitated spiritual condition. Like many whose spirituality is starved of proper nourishment, she is focussed on idolatry, fixated on worshipping her son and obsessed with his absence from home, even though she and her husband live in Cambridge and see Joseph several times a week at services and receptions afterwards. She despises Dr. Freeman, the choir director, whom she sees as depriving her of her son by refusing to make an exception to the rule that all choristers reside in college. (I would expect that so long as his parents reside in Cambridge and provide him with nice stuff, that Joseph vastly prefers the company of his mates from the choir to the constant attentions of his mum, whose clinginess makes an anaconda seem stand-offish by comparison.
Although she attends services regularly, Louise has no sense of the ceremony as a religious experience, and is liturgically and scripturally illiterate. At one point she wonders at the verse in the Magnificat, ‘the rich he hath sent away empty’ and wonders at what ‘the author’ meant. The ‘author’ of course was St. Luke or the Virgin Mary, depending on how you think about it, with some assistance from Hannah in 1st Samuel as anyone with a minimal Anglican formation (or who had taken my Bible as literature course) knows.
Louise is also being tormented by her neighbour, who gives extremely noisy parties and plays loud pop music late into the night, laughing at her complaints. After the council authorities fail to silence the neighbour, who has the suggestive name Justin Clay (try it as three words) a local music shop suggests that Lou give him a taste of even worse medicine by loudly playing Capleton’s Leave Babylon, which works. (Try a sample on iTunes). But the pop music is replaced with choral music that only Lou can really hear and with which Justin appears to have nothing to do.
Lou escapes by buying a house in a gated community called Swallowfield an hour and a half’s drive from Cambridge in the Culver Valley, a community which makes a fetish of quiet and orderliness where the inhabitants are constantly observed. (Some literally live in glass houses/). Even children are not allowed to splash in the pool.
Some reviewers have questioned how Lou could have afforded two expensive houses, and if Swallowfield lis in the Culver Valley, readers of Sophie Hannah’s mystery stories expect it would be protected by that sterling law enforcement team the Culver Valley Constabulary, under the brilliant leadership of Superintendent Proust and featuring dysfunctional personal relationships. Fortunately Sophie Hannah does not mix her genres. Instead we meet the Swallowfield sales rep Bethan who lives in a cubical house called Hush. Lou’s new house is named The Boundary and has a glass front.
Even the reader who is tied to the canons of realistic fiction ought to realise by now that Swallowfield is listed in no earthly post-code directory and that that we are indeed at a boundary between the land of the living and somewhere that is not in the same same time zone as any of us presently inhabits. And at Swallowfield Lou not only hears the choristers who give the title to this book, she will see them, and eventually she will learn who they are.
In an epilogue Sophie Hannah pays homage to Susan Hill’s The Woman in Black and like Hill’s work, The Orphan Choir exhibits many elements squarely in the tradition of M. R. James, the greatest exponent of the Classic English ghost story. We have here the Cambridge College with the chapel, choir school and Anglican worship.
I’ve found most attempts to stretch a M. R. James story to the length of a full-scale novel unsatisfying, and even novella length, like Andrew Taylor’s Broken Voices or Hill’s The Woman in Black, seems a bit long. Although a short novel, The Orphan Choir dragged badly for me. Sophie Hannah seemed to take forever setting things up. And I suspect many readers find Lou’s constant whinging extremely irritating. For most of this book I wondered if it could earn even two stars.
My four-star rating (probably a trifle generous) was earned by the absolutely splendid denouement, that totally satisfied me aesthetically, emotionally, spiritually, and may I add theologically and liturgically. Lou receives exactly the nunc demittis she’s been seeking unwittingly from the beginning, when she was already spiritually dead but did not know it.
Lately I haven't had much time to read books as voraciously as I used to so I have been extremely particular with what books I allow to occupy my limited time. The Orphan Choir by Sophie Hannah is one of the books I decided to read based on it being described as a woman's ascent into madness with horror elements in it. The first part is quite true but the second half of that assessment is very far from the truth.
The Orphan Choir is narrated by Louise. A woman who is driven mad by the insane thumping of her neighbors music at odd hours of the night. To make matters worse, she's convinced he's doing it intentionally. All she wants is a little peace and quiet so she can go back to complaining about the loss of her son Joseph who boards at a prominent school where he's a member of the Saviour Choir. Before long, Louise hears her sons choir and can't understand why she deserves such torture.
In an effort to get away from her noisy neighbor in Cambridge, Louise moves with her husband Stuart to a quiet slice of heaven of England's countryside. Ultimately, Louise finds that quite possibly the music she's hearing may in fact be in her head. Could she be missing her son so much that she can't get the choral music out of her head, or is something more sinister at play?
Honestly, I was not in love with this novel for a good while. It's an easy, engrossing read yet the narrator takes some getting used to. I could have maybe appreciated this novel more had I not gotten in her head. Ironic, huh? Seriously, she complains about everything. To top off her complaining, she whines to no end about how much she misses her son who's away at the boarding school.
What ultimately saves this novel for me is the ending. I was ready to write this one off as just another novel with not much going on but... I feel it ends perfectly. Sophie Hannah pretty much owed me for wasting so much time and energy on Louise that the ending needed to make up for it big time. I liked the ending and yes, it does supply that horror feel the blurb suggests.
My overall thoughts are that The Orphan Choir by Sophie Hannah was not bad at all. I only wish there was a starring character I could actually want to be in the same room with. The Orphan Choir is a fast read and may appeal to fans of psychological suspense. Overall, I would like to read more by this author so long as I get a little more horror and a lot less Louise.
A quick well written story with spooky bits but not too spooky for the likes of me who are easily spooked ... It's my first encounter with Sophie Hannah's writing and I will certainly look out for another of her books in the future!
I was so disappointed with this book. I was lured into reading it and was very excited to read it because of the blurb I had read in a magazine which said it would keep me awake at night with fear. Great I thought! I read it over four days, quickly, because I was desperate for it to actually get going. It was yawningly boring for a supposed scary ghost story which wasn't really a ghost story at all until right at the end, the last few pages. Which in themselves were equally disappointing. It was a little like reading something a child would write for an essay at school. The writing was also far too flippant to be scary and trying to be too clever and hip. I actually did not like the style of writing at all. I have another of Sophie Hannah's books which was not terribly good either unfortunately. I get so cross when I read books like this because I feel as though I have wasted my time. I am going to give her another chance - I am about to start The Carrier. If this one is equally awful I shall not be reading any more...hey ho...
I love Sophie Hannah, and while I didn't inhale The Orphan Choir the way I did, say, Little Face, I did stay up half the night reading it. I love, love, love the fact that the protagonist is so unlikable. She's unlikable in a very real way; several times while I was reading I found myself making faces at the page and thinking how very much I would hate to be married to someone like that. It's exhausting to be Louise Beeston. She's paranoid and neurotic and narcissistic to the point that she can't imagine how everything could not be about her. She keeps herself awake weeping because she's sure her neighbor is plotting against her.
But here's the other part: her neuroses stem from the fact that her seven year old son, a singing prodigy, has been accepted to a prestigious boarding school. I've got a seven year old son; I cannot imagine only getting to see him at performances and on holidays. So she's horrible, yes, but I can sympathize with some of it.
The horror element of the story builds slowly; if you're looking for something that will plunge you into the action, this is not the book for you. But because Louise is so self-involved, the reader actually starts feeling the horror before she does, which is a lot of fun.
The bottom line: this is a great ghost story, and a nice departure from Hannah's other thrillers (which are fantastic in their own right).
The Orphan Choir is the third novel I've read in Hammer's series of horror novels by by non-horror authors - the others being Helen Dunmore's The Greatcoat, which I loved, and Jeanette Winterson's The Daylight Gate, which I wanted to love but didn't. By crime writer and poet Sophie Hannah, The Orphan Choir is part ghost story, part psychological thriller, with a tense, oppressive atmosphere and an intriguingly unreliable narrator.
The story opens with narrator Louise driven to distraction by a feckless, selfish neighbour who plagues her regularly with his loud music. (If Louise's reaction to this seems extreme, I speak as someone who once suffered a similar problem with my own neighbour and I assure that Louise's taut, paranoid fury is all too plausible.) Despite the support of Pat Jervis, the Environmental Health Officer who arrives to investigate the noise in the middle of the night, the noise continues - and this time, it seems that Louise's neighbour has found a new way to torment her. He's stopped playing his former repertoire of 80s hits, and instead, he's moved on to choral church music, sung by boy choristers. Desperately missing her seven-year-old son Joseph, who has recently begun boarding at a prestigious choir school and feeling horribly claustrophobic as work on the exterior of the house generates endless dust and blocks out natural light, Louise appears to descend into obsession and hysteria. A second home in an almost disturbingly peaceful gated community in the countryside could be the answer ... or will the voices of the choir follow her there too?
One of the great successes of The Orphan Choir is the deftly constructed narrative. It's Louise herself who tells the story, and it's often hard for the reader to gauge the state of Louise's mental health - just at is for her occasionally dismissive but ultimately confused husband Stuart. Louise is sharply witty and observant but she's also prone to paranoia and erratic behaviour at times. Could the biggest danger faced by Louise, and even her son Joseph, actually be Louise herself? Is it possible that the voices she hears and the visions she sees are figments of an increasingly over-active imagination? In this sense, I heard echoes of The Turn of the Screw in The Orphan Choir, and that, of course, can only be an excellent thing.
The Orphan Choir works well, then, as a psychological mystery - but what of the ghost story? Well, I'm glad to say that Sophie Hannah has made a fine job of her foray into supernatural horror, and Hannah has an excellent command of those essential elements of eerie, slowly escalating suspense characteristic of all the best ghost literature. I found The Orphan Choir tense, chilling and unsettling, and it seems clear to me that Sophie Hannah has a genuine respect and understanding for the genre (something I found sadly lacking in Jeanette Winterson's The Daylight Gate).
This is a short read, into which Sophie Hannah has somehow managed to pack numerous twists without ever making this slim little volume feel rushed or over-complicated: the careful layering of tension and atmosphere is executed at the perfect pace as The Orphan Choir edges creepily towards its climax. Suitably for a novel with Hammer connections, there's a strong gothic flavour, but it's employed in a modern setting, to excellent effect. The Orphan Choir is a beautifully constructed, atmospheric chiller which I highly recommend - and if you've got time to read it one sitting, so much the better, as once you get to the halfway point, you won't want to put it down.
A extraordinarily bad novel, which is made worse by the neurotic and bizarre obsessions of the main character. Most of the book was taken up by noise nuisance information and we didn't get to the nitty gritty of the orphan choir until about halfway through the book. The ending had no real connection to the obsessions running through the book, so essentially it felt a bit shoved together at the last minute. 1.5 stars, because it was quite bad in an entertaining way.
This may be the worst book I've ever read that does not promote objectionable ideas. The plot is so bad that I felt personally insulted by the author's thinking that a reader such as myself might enjoy it.
É difícil para mim escrever uma opinião deste livro porque: - Até mais de meio, foi uma seca para mim lê-lo (não ando com muita sorte com os livros), muito repetitivo, sem grande coisa a acontecer e bastante previsível. - A partir da parte em que deixou de ser seca foi de leitura compulsiva, se bem que... também me arruinou um outro livro que tenho para ler, um clássico que se chama: "The woman in black"... pois diz se gostei desse, iria gostar deste e assim, percebi a temática do clássico...
Um casal que vive num sítio longe de ser problemático, tem um filho, mas esse filho não vive com eles. Está num prestigiado colégio de música e pertence ao seu coro, sendo um dos melhores.
Acontece que, este colégio funciona como um colégio interno, ou seja, os alunos que o frequentam apenas estão com os pais em alguns fins de semana e nas férias. E é isto que faz com que a mãe... fique louca. Ela não consegue suportar o filho longe. Ela precisa do filho na sua casa, com eles, todos os dias e aqui percebe-se que o filho foi para o colégio contra sua vontade...
Entra em conflito com um vizinho que ouve música aos altos berros e a perturba no seu sono. Até que um dia, ela cisma que o vizinho quer que ela fique doida colocando música de coros... apenas a uma certa hora da noite e mais tarde quando o marido (devido ao seu trabalho) não se encontra em casa...
O livro desenvolve-se até que aparecem novas personagens para ajudar Louise a lidar com o seu vizinho e até Louise decidir que não consegue viver ali e mudar-se.
Começam os verdadeiros problemas e vamos conhecer o coro de meninos orfãos...
A escrita da autora também foi um pouco aborrecida. O ritmo nem aqueceu nem me arrefeceu. Foi uma leitura que vai ter as minhas 3 estrelas mas é como na escola... um satisfaz.. menos (2,5*).
I really wanted to like this but didnt - I think the main problem was a promotional sticker on the cover saying something like - "If you loved the Woman in Black you will love this." I did really enjoy the original Woman black novel by Susan Hill but this was nothing like it and not as scary at all.
It was well written and I felt for the main character who had a very hard time from a noisy neighbour from hell and an uncaring husband, and who missed her 7 year old son very much but it felt like it was a novel about an ordinary dysfunctional family with all its stresses and strains, and not so much about ghosts.
The Orphan Choir is a strange book. More than half of the book is exposition, setting up for this grand and mysterious supernatural event to happen in the last fifty-or-so pages. This isn’t particularly bad – I like horror stories with a good build up – but the problem here is that the climax is so anticlimatic it feels like the build up is going nowhere. There are so many inconsistencies in this book and so many moments where I was going ‘what the hell is going on’ that I’m surprised the author already has several books under her belt. It reads like a debut novel, in that plot-wise it’s still clumsy, and there are so many plot holdes I’m shocked an editor didn’t catch them.
Louise has felt depressed ever since her seven-year-old kid has been sent away to boarding school, where he sings in a professional choir. Her relationship with her husband is less than amazing, and she misses her little boy. She starts hearing strange noises in her own home, but initially blames it on the neighbor, who likes to blast his music all through the night. When the music that starts playing is a children’s choir, she thinks it’s just another way of the neighbor to torment her. She calls in the police, and a female cop shows up who acts a little strange but otherwise promises Louise to help her fix her problem. When Louise’s husband in another act of egocentrism decides it’s time to sand their house, blocking out all light for weeks, Louise starts feeling like a trapped animal.
She finds a gated community selling houses, and convinces her husband to buy a second home there, where they can take Joseph during his holiday. It baffled me that one moment Louise is worrying about spending money and the other moment they buy a second home, while renovating their current home. It makes no sense to me, but I was willing to forgive that if the book wasn’t riddled with other errors of the same sort. At the community, everything is fine for a while, and Louise begins to suspect hearing the eerie choir sing was due to stress and losing her son to the boarding school rather than the noisy neighbor. That is, until the noise resurfaces when she hears her son will be forced to go back to boarding school early. While her husband Stuart tries to calm her down, Louise begins to seriously freak out and has a ghostly encounter that’ll change her forever.
The problem is that the ghosts make no appearance until at the end, which makes this book read more like a psychological thriller rather than a ghost story. I’m not saying the author should’ve gone into full-out ghost mode straightaway, but the tension builds up for too long and results in too little. The encounter at the end is hardly spectacular or scary. Louise is an underdeveloped character who has no backbone to speak of, and only has two emotions: fear and anxiety. She constantly worries about what others think of her, and never develops throughout the book. Joseph and Stuart are more like cardboard figures than people. Stuart’s sole personality trait is to annoy Louise constantly, making me wonder why they ever married in the first place.
Then there’s this scene at the end coming out of nowhere that made me want to throw the book in the garbage bin. I don’t want to spoil anything, so I’ll be vague here. Something happens, out of nowhere, without any hints whatsoever, and it’s messed up and strange and makes absolutely no sense. It’s a Deus Ex Machina moment more obvious than I’ve ever seen before.
When Louise has her encounter with the spirits, it’s not even remotely scary, which was another letdown. I would’ve at least hoped, since this book was classified as horror, that it would be scary. Instead, it’s a melancholic, sad, depressing moment.
The pacing is slow, but I could live with that. The writing is pretty bland, but somehow it works. Even Louise’s less-than-interesting personality works. What doesn’t work are the clichés piled upon clichés, the storylines going nowhere, the absolute lack of tension and the unnecessary plot twists to over-complicate the book. I for one, am not impressed. If you’re a fan of ghost stories, you can give The Orphan Choir a shot, but there are a lot of other, far better, ghost novels out there.
My review is based on the writing solely, not Mrs. Beeston's character. While Louise got on my last nerve (rant about her below), I also realize that the protagonist does not need to be perfect or agreeable in order to have a good book. Despite this, I wasn't impressed with The Orphan Choir. I was more confused than anything. There were so many holes and leaps and bounds this book went through and I'm really not sure if I completely understood what happened. Here's some questions I'd like answered:
- What careers do Louise and Stuart have that allows her to take so much time off and afford two houses? - Why is the Orphan Choir only appearing to Louise? Did it appear to any other child's parents before they died? -Maybe a little more back story on the Orphan Choir? They touched on three of the choristers but has this been an apparition that's been around before the modern era? -What compelled Bethan to kill Joseph? -Where did Pat Jervis come from? Why did she suddenly appear at Louise's house pretending to be a complaint official? -What happened to the complaint official that was originally sent to Louise's house? or was there anyone sent? -Am I crazy or am I the only person who has never heard of the name Bethan? And last, but not least, -Who in their right mind doesn't like the song Don't Stop Me Now? If Mr. Fahrenheit was my neighbor I'd pop over every night and gladly do Queen karaoke with him until all hours of the night! The fact that she said she didn't like that song should have been a warning to put the book down and walk away.
okay, some of these questions are facetious, but others are very valid. There's a lot that the author left out, and maybe she was hoping the shock factor that Louise wasn't crazy after all and the Orphan Choir was an actual bad omen would overshadow these plot holes but in my eyes it didn't.
Now, speaking of Louise: what an annoying character. Its normal to miss your son and be depressed if he's gone but it's something else to put your bitterness and feelings before his opportunities and potential career. She was absolutely selfish to try to sabotage her son's career because she didn't like that he was at boarding school DOWN THE STREET. Plus in the end her own actions and insistence to pull Joseph out of his school fulfilled his impending death rather than keeping him in! I've never met a more frustrating character. I felt sorry for Stuart and Joseph that they had to deal with her antics. I figured that the author's intention was to make Louise so uncompromising, in which case, she succeeded.
With Hammer books snapping up some great authors already to work on their books, Shaun Hutson, Julie Myerson, Jeanette Winterson, Helen Dunmore and Tim Lebbon to name a few, it’s great news that crime authors seem to be stepping up to the mark now too.
Martyn Waites recently announced that he is penning a sequel to one of Hammer’s greatest and most recent hit ‘The Woman in Black’ and now we have Sophie Hannah with this slow burn but very rewarding tale. What starts out as a ‘neighbours from hell’ tale, tinged with great humour as her central character wrestles with the fact that the disturbances from her ‘Mr Fahrenheit’ who insists on playing Freddy Mercury at loud volume into the small hours, slowly and creepily evolves into something fare more threatening as the supernatural elements come out to play.
Unlike many tales of ghostly goings-on, this isn’t a case of what’s bothering Louise being something hidden in her home’s past, rather something that will follow her wherever she tries to flee and take solace.
Children in horror tales and movies are always a hit, and having an entire choir of the little ankle-biters here cannot fail to amp up the tension as the story progresses.
I’ve read a couple of reviews where readers have commented that the novella is slow to get into the supernatural parts, but I think that is to the story’s strength and only serves to build the tension – We know that bad things are coming and the longer an author can put off that reveal whilst successfully keeping the interest going can only serve to make for a more rewarding ghost tale.
It’s great to see Hammer rising again and growing from strength to strength, and for it to be bringing some top authors along for the ride.
I have loved all of Sophie Hannah's other books, so I was excited to read this one. Well, that feeling didn't last very long.
After only a few pages in, I wanted to strangle Louise Beeston myself. Annoying, shouty, and unreasonable don't even begin to describe this character. I found myself rooting for the noisy neighbor.
This book is touted as a ghost story, but it barely contains a supernatural element, and it's so forced into the story that it almost feels like an after-thought.
I hope Sophie Hannah sticks with the psychological thrillers that she normally writes, and abandons this line of writing.
Reading Sophie Hannah is like meeting up with an old friend - I know I will have a good time. A departure from her psychological thrillers and yet, just as good, this gothic horror tale kept me enthralled and scared me in equal measure. Like all her books, I did not see what was coming. Spine chilling, goose bump inducing, brilliant.
I was hoping for greatness. However, despite the wonderful narrator, this book fell flat and was dry more often than not. The ending, also, was a bit convoluted and the overall takeaway was perplexion.
The sticker on the cover insists that if you liked The Woman in Black, you'll love this. This isn't surprising as the book is published by Hammer who produced the recent film adaptation and are now going to milk that ghost classic even further with a sequel.
But this book has about as much in common with Susan Hill's brilliant novel as Count Duckula has with Christopher Lee's Dracula.
A ghost story has to be scary. But when the first person narrator doesn't even realise there is anything supernatural going on for at least a good three quarters of the book - and therefore shows no fear - the book hits a major problem. My patience wore out long before the first inkling of anything that could be considered a ghostly visitation. I only stuck with the book to the end because I couldn't quite believe one could be written where the writer forgot to put one in.
In fact, if you were to count the number of pages dedicated to the supernatural, you'd be forgiven for thinking it was just a subplot anyway. The real story seems to be a neurotic and extremely irritating mother pining for her son at boarding school and overthinking her war with her neighbour.
The book strikes me as a very short story that has been padded out beyond breaking point to reach the necessary word count for a novella. And it is really, really broken.
The first person viewpoint really handicaps the book because the lead character is just so goddamn unlikeable. And I say that having only read America Psycho for the first time last year. At least Patrick Bateman was entertainingly insane. Her annoyingly repetitive and ridiculous obsessions become wearing very quickly and even the final outcome seems primarily to be motivated out of her selfishness. She doesn't change. There is no lesson learned. And the first person viewpoint puts you right inside her head, which makes this an extremely frustrating read.
"...I never have cared about facts when they don't feel true," she says at one point, reinforcing Louise's complete lack of any critical thinking ability. Sadly, this slows the book down terribly because the reader understands what's really going on many chapters before Louise is finally and begrudgingly forced to accept reality.
So if you want to spend a few hours in the company of a neurotic and irritating helicopter mother who will spend pages documenting the noises of her neighbour in excruciating detail and scant paragraphs to anything paranormal (because she doesn't realise that's what they are) you'll love this.
Maybe the sticker on the cover should read 'If you were too scared by The Woman in Black, you'll love this.'
I am glad I didn't know this book was part of the Hammer imprint before reading it. I thought it was another psychological thriller by a writer whose work I've recently found I enjoy. I definitely wouldn't have purchased/started reading it if I knew it was this imprint (my own preconceptions about Hammer being largely disposable pulp fiction are to blame for this, and I find Sophie Hannah to be more than a cut above this).
Some of the other Goodreads commentary on this book surprised me with its negativity (I was curious to find out what others had thought, the book being from 2013). The objections seemed mostly erroneous to me: for instance, disliking a narrator is not a good enough reason to dislike a book - this is like saying a newspaper is objectionable because it reports some bad news. Anyone who has even the slightest background in literature is aware that the omniscient, authoritative narrator went out the window a long time ago, and that it's debatable whether he (usually a 'he') was ever objective in the first place. (Admittedly, I tend not to finish books I dislike, because I don't see much point in spending precious leisure time reading books I find unlikeable.)
Undoubtedly, I would find the narrator, Louise, profoundly annoying in real life; she is quite often rude, and initially seems to be a rather neurotic, anxious mother of the type who could do her child psychological damage. Sympathetic as I would be to her sensitivity to noisy neighbours, her reaction to that became a bit much too. Still, her story is interesting and haunting, and it becomes clearer as the book goes on why she has developed some of these characteristics - the reasons being metaphysically based.
I was disappointed at the ending to this book; but that is more a commentary on how I wanted the plot to pan out. I wanted to know a little more about the narrator; what she did for a living, for example, and what her own parents were like. I didn't find the book terrifying or frightening, but it was definitely a story that I felt I had to finish, and it also struck me that it could make a very good film. Overall, I prefer the non-supernaturally based mysteries by this author, but if you like this genre you could do an awful lot worse than to read this book.
The sound is loud, coming from the next-door neighbor’s house, and it has jolted Louise Beeston right out of her sleep. It is Queen’s “Don’t Stop Me Now,” and it is the song that usually starts it all. The weekend music blasting cruelly into her bedroom. No matter how many times she has politely requested that the neighbor, Justin Clay, please turn it down.
Her husband Stuart is nonchalant. He is not even pretending to be supportive. In fact, the noise doesn’t really bother him. He can sleep through anything.
So begins the saga of the noise nuisance that will drive Louise to take drastic steps. But more will transpire before that happens. Louise will call the police, who will refer her to environmental health. A report will be made. And steps will be taken. Or so she believes.
Meanwhile, as time passes, something changes. The music is now that of choir boys singing, and it appears at odd times. And there is no way to prove the sounds are even occurring, as nobody else hears them.
The Orphan Choir is a disturbing story of what happens when one woman desperately misses her seven-year-old son, Joseph, who is a boarder at Saviour College, run by a Dr. Freeman. The story is a mix of madness, despair, and ghostly warnings. Even as I kept imagining one scenario, another would appear. I thought I would discover that the husband and Dr. Freeman were playing cruel tricks on Louise. But I was wrong.
What does Louise do to try to escape the noise pollution next door? How will her new second home at Swallowfield give her the peace she desires? Why does she suddenly realize that the noise is not the issue, but that more is going on, and that there will be no peace to be found anywhere? A surreal set of events unfold, and finally, at the very end, we realize what has transpired. 4 stars.
In the beginning I had a few reservations about this book. I wasn't sure how long the author could use the noisy neighbour as the focal point of the story and it seemed as though things weren't moving along as quick as I would expect. I am pleased to report that there was in fact a good reason she focused on this part of the story and that soon after there was a turning point in the story that not only made it worth the time to read, but surprised me in the process.
I enjoyed this book. Sophie Hannah has a way of drawing the reader into the world of her characters with her unexpected and witty dialogue. I liked the realism of her character's speech and her ability to make things seem as though they were happening in the same room with me.
Admittedly, I have a thing for creepy novels and stuff that goes bump in the night, but because of this I find it hard to enjoy a lot of books in this category. it seems authors usually go for a set model of how everything is going to go in this type of novel and that bugs me. This author took some risks by breaking away from the expected and I thought that worked in her favour.
The ending of this novel was not the least bit predictable and I appreciated that. Try as I might to figure out exactly what was going to happen, I wasn't able to until the final page.
If you enjoy suspenseful novels with a heavy dose of psychological terror, this will be a book you want to check out.
This review is based on a digital ARC from netgalley and provided by the publisher.
l liked some of the elements at the end but felt so dragged through the book (I really lost patience with Lou!) that I was ready for any ending. The paranormal element, for which I read the book, seemed haphazard and thrown in at the end as a sop ....I did like that the woman from the housing council was a ghost! That was great!! But Lou was such a loon I was like "all right, already!" Swallowtail, Swallowfield, the rural "paradise" where she bought the second family home, was sooo Stepford. Now, I was ready for any creepy thing to happen there! I did empathise about the noisy neighbours. But if Joseph had not been whacked by Bethan he might have died of embarrassment caused by his mother. The book was well-written...but the central character was exquisitely annoying, and everything came to the reader through her. I appreciated the author's comments at the end of the book but she has a looong way to go to approach the creepiness of The Woman in Black. This book wasn't scary. It also wasn't realistic. Lou acts as if her son is across the globe, not across town, she never goes to work, her attitude is dire and negative when she appears to have such a good life...a good life which is invisible to her, which she doesn't live, blinded as she is by her obsessions. So perhaps when she dies at the end it's not such a bad thing...to wit, she's been living the life of a ghost.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
And that is where it stops. Initial looks and synopsis sound good, delivery was lacking ANY punch. I don't even know how to genre this. It isn't a horror-way too mild- but mystery isn't quite it. How about Annoying ranting and ravings with a slight horrific/mystery twist at the end. And I do mean slight. You can tell something is going on throughout the book that is off, but the MC gets utterly grating o ones nerves with her complaining and self-delusions, etc. I really had a hard time with this. I felt it to really drag and by quite dull. I hated the characters.