Thrilling and melancholic, with a through line of female connection and courage across centuries, this ambitious and evocative novel spans three timelines—present day, 1645, and 1216—in a remote English seaside town where legends of witches and ghosts obscure an even stranger truth. For fans of Simone St. James, Eve Chase and Jennifer McMahon.
Teetering on the edge of the North Sea in Norfolk, Grimdark Hall is both grim and dark in name and nature. When Cló and Jude Honeyborne arrive from Toronto to claim Jude’s inheritance, Cló is unsettled by the foreboding ancient building and the hostility of Jude’s sisters, who stalk her every move.
But Cló is drawn to the strange energy of the treacherous fens and the haunting sadness of a drowned village in the bay where ghostly church bells toll thirteen, sweeping her back into another woman’s memories . . .
In 1645 Euphemia Figgis was accused of witchcraft and burned at the stake, screaming a curse on the Honeybornes as the flames consumed her. Now, flashes of Effie’s life torment Cló at every turn.
Cló isn’t the only one who’s lived before: an odd little girl lurks about Grimdark claiming to be the reincarnation of a notorious pirate, and waiting in the shadows is a darker, vengeful incarnation who has hunted them both through the centuries in search of a medieval treasure.
As echoes of Cló’s past lives converge in present threats, she must confront a final reckoning of old betrayals and relentless greed to end an eight-hundred-year-old quest for vengeance.
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Arriving at Grimdark Hall to claim her husband's inheritance, Cló and Jude Honeyborne believe they will be there for a while and then return to their lives in Canada. However, nothing goes to plan as Cló begins to remember lives centuries past, including Euphemia Figgis, who in 1645 was accused of witchcraft and burned at the stake, screaming a curse on the Honeybornes as flames consumed her.
Shannon Morgan creates a beautifully atmospheric novel where the gothic creeps in from the corners and the past consumes the present until the lines between blur. Cló was an amazing character to follow, as she doesn't understand what is happening but listens to the whispers of the past with a mixture of curiosity and fear. She feels incredibly realistic, where she freaks out at the haunts and connects to the "weird" locals that others ignore and treat with disgust.
Overall, Grimdark is a beautifully gothic tale of reincarnation, mystery, and treasure lost centuries past. Morgan's book is definitely a must-read for anyone obsessed with the gothic.
Thank you, NetGalley and Kensington Publishing, for sending me an ARC in exchange for my honest review.