The Congregation by A.J. Griffiths-Jones
A Review by Pete Adams – author
Captivating writing, consummate storytelling – AJ is fast becoming a favourite.
This is the third book I have read by A.J. Griffiths-Jones. I have never been disappointed and have already purchased another, and while the other books were not looking, I slipped it up my ‘to be read’ list.
I have found that AJ has a way of writing that draws the reader into her mildly eccentric characters while, almost unaware, a sine wave of mystery gathers amplitude, until I find myself obsessed by the story and the underlying mysteries. I say mysteries, because there are many in this book, a veritable cornucopia of secretive lives of Parishioners who await the arrival of their new, ordinarily taciturn, Vicar; a priest who prefers his own company, but is parachuted into a small village where everybody knows each other and a church that is always full. He is therefore, compelled to engage with the abounding congregation and slowly he is sucked in, until...
Well, I’ll leave you to find out, as the ending I never saw coming; wonderful.
I recommend this book, not so much as a cosy read, as it left me with a myriad of thoughts and an ongoing dialogue in my mind that still churns; shocks; heart-warming moments; pain and misery, love, well, it’s life really…something the vicar had, up until now, avoided.
I am ordinarily a slow reader, but I read this book in one day; I loved it and would not hesitate to recommend it, and this author.